Jason McCoy Inc.
New York
41 East 57th Street
212 3191996
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Leon Polk Smith
dal 28/4/2006 al 2/6/2006

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Leon Polk Smith



 
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28/4/2006

Leon Polk Smith

Jason McCoy Inc., New York

Collages and gouaches from the 1950s


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A Centennial Celebration of his Oeuvre Jason McCoy, Inc. is pleased to present Leon Polk Smith (1906 -1996); Invention: A Centennial Celebration of His Oeuvre, which focuses on collages and gouaches from the 1950s. This exhibition marks the first extensive show of Smith’s work at the gallery since 1996.

Born in 1906, Smith grew up in a farming community of Choctaw and Chickasaw Native Americans in the territory later annexed by the Unites States as the state of Oklahoma. He studied at Oklahoma State College before moving to New York to pursue graduate study in art education at Columbia University's Teachers College. That same year, he was introduced to European Modernism through the work of Jean Arp, Constantin Brancusi, and Piet Mondrian, among others, when visiting an exhibition of the A.E. Gallatin Collection at the Gallery of Living Art, New York University.

Though these artists certainly had an impact on Smith’s work, his signature style of hard edge abstraction went beyond one influence. As Carter Ratcliff explained in his catalogue essay for Smith’s 1996 retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum, there is a unique “American quality" to Smith’s oeuvre, based on the artist’s impulse and longing to discover a unique territory for himself. Whereas the late 1930s and 1940s saw Smith experiment with Surrealist and Expressionist styles, the following decade marked the artist’s maturation of a unique visual formulation. Smith’s hand reflected the freedom of a draughtsman using a Striper brush. With it, he achieved a clarity of line that captured all the nuances of a visceral Expressionism.

From the 1950s on, Smith’s abstract compositions became increasingly distilled. Two unusual geometric shapes of deeply saturated hues, characterized by crisp outlines often define these works. The division of negative and positive space becomes blurred and the distinction between foreground and background simply no longer exists. While the clarity and openness of the compositional structure might bring the actual landscape of Smith’s childhood and youth to mind, it more abstractly, provides both artist and viewer with a transcendental landscape for intimate self-reflection.

Image: Leon Polk Smith, Stretch of Black III, 1961. Collection The National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. Gift of Eleanor Ward.

Jason McCoy, Inc.
41 East 57th Street, 11th floor New York, NY 10022

IN ARCHIVIO [9]
Two solo show
dal 3/5/2012 al 28/6/2012

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