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Modena
Acrylic on canvas
60 x 60 inches
(152,5 x 152,5 cm) |
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The Dillon Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition
of new and past paintings by Hector Leonardi, one of America's
most accomplished painters. This is Leonardi's first exhibition
in three years and the first at the Dillon Gallery.
Leonardi comes from the second generation of American
abstractionists, after the sturm and drang had passed
and painters could be free to explore all the possibilities
liberated by surface of the canvas. A student of Josef
Albers at Yale in the early 1950s, Leonardi mastered color
as few of his contemporaries did. But as John Russell
has written, “the homage paid here is not to
the square. It is, rather, to the ingenuity of light,
which can define and redefine a given structure in a hundred
different ways....It's a work of wonderment.”
Over the decades, Leonardi's work has received glowing
reviews in a number of publications and he has developed
a loyal following of collectors. But a decade ago he entered
upon a period of sustained creativity and experimentation
that has resulted in a series of dramatic breakthroughs.
The paintings in the exhibition reflect his current vision
and several of the compelling paths he has traveled to
arrive there. Leonardi works in acrylic, painting directly
on the canvas and using strips of paint to build up an
intricate surface texture. Each painting develops from
a cluster of scpecific colors and tonalities, like a musical
suite, and in its energy, complexity and optical dazzle
the work manages to unite th most diverse influences,
including, Josef Albers, Gustav Klimt, Paul Signac and
Jackson Pollock.
But with these Leonardi can also evoke a powerful undertone
of darkness, violence and mystery. it is the power that
prompted critic John Yau to write of Leonardi's previous
exhibition, “In making art that looks back at
us without blinking, Leonardi is a master.”
Leonardi
has had many one-man exhibitions, most recently at the
Viewing Room and at Robert Steele Gallery, both in New
York City. His paintings are included in amany public
and private collections.
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