Hector Leonardi: New Paintings
May 1, 2008- May 29, 2008
Reception: May 1, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
555 W 25th St
Dillon Gallery is proud to announce its second one-person exhibition of paintings by Hector
Leonardi. Completed in the last two years, the work highlights the extraordinary creativity and
productive energy of a master of color and light.
Early on, the distinguished art critic John Russell identified Leonardi as the premier pupil in the
United States of Josef Albers and praised his evocation of light, calling his painting “a work of
wonderment.” More recently, writing in Art in America, critic Lyle Rexer lauded Leonardi’s art
as a passionate defense of the pure visuality of painting.
Leonardi graduated from Yale with a MFA in painting in 1955 and was later a fellow at
the MacDowell Colony and a Critic’s Award winner at the prestigious Tokyo
Invitational. He came of age in the exciting milieu of a diverse second generation of
American abstract painters, including Jules Olitski, Adolph Gottlieb, Sam Francis, and
Richard Diebenkorn. The idiom Leonardi has developed reflects an awareness of all
these sources as well as of the work of pioneering abstractionists Mark Rothko and
Jackson Pollock. Yet he harnesses their insights to a very different end. Deeply
influenced by the East End light in his Bridgehampton studio, Leonardi owes perhaps his
greatest debt to the Impressionists and their followers, to mavericks such as Signac and
Seurat. He untethers color from the burden of description and achieves a luminosity that
only Rothko attempted. Unlike most of his abstractionist counterparts, Leonardi has
never been content to mine the same imagery or to pursue a signature style. His work of
the last decade in particular has ceaselessly pushed forward into new emotional and
visual territory.
The thirty-eight paintings in the current exhibition show the artist at his most innovative,
combining his knowledge of color and light with complex experiments in texture. On a
tonal foundation of color, Leonardi builds intricate structures of acrylic fragments and
over-painting to create fields in which a variety of abstract gestures, from incised marks
to single drips, can coexist and enrich each other. He evokes line and form by
juxtaposition. These are painterly, passionate surfaces, diaphanous and fragmentary,
replete with visual contrasts suggestive of both tragedy and celebration. Leonardi has the
supreme ability to unite opposites and reconcile contradictions. For poet and critic John
Yau, the paintings have a deeper meaning, creating “metaphors to help one see.” For
viewers, the result is a dramatic and engrossing experience, one capable of renewing faith
in painting as an art of maximum risk and maximum reward.'
Hector Leonardi has had more that 60 one-person shows in the United States and
internationally. His work is represented in many public and private collections.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Dillon Gallery | | Address | 555 W 25th St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-727-8585 | | Fax | 212-727-8705 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 10-6 | |
| |
|
© 2005-2008 chelseaartgalleries.com
The information on this page is provided "as is", and might be incorrect, incomplete and/or out of date. The site owner makes no representation as to the accuracy of the information or its suitability for any purpose. The owner disclaims any liability for errors that may be contained therein.
sitemap
|