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Changing Rhythms:
Works by Leland Bell, 1950s-1991
April 7 through May
10, 2002
Leland Bell (1922-1991) took
inspiration from modernists as diverse as Derain, Hélion,
Giacometti, and Mondrian, and he applied the lessons of abstraction
to figurative painting.
"Searching for poetry instead
of novelty, Bell focused on three traditional subjects: still life,
portraiture, and figure composition. Adamant and often arrogant
in arguing his beliefs, he was modest in his subjects, choosing
to paint the people and things around him that he loved most...
...Leland Bell's paintings are
immediately recognizable for their singular graphic qualities: black
contour lines, bold planes of color, and dynamic composition. His
work is clearly more abstract than that of almost any contemporary
figurative painter. But his paintings are distinctive, not so much
for their obvious abstract qualities, as for their inherent tension,
awkwardness, and mystery....In the
almost theatrical gestures of the figures and the curious dynamic
between principal figures and ancillary yet focal images, Bell's
domestic scenes suggest arcane allegories or elaborately choreographed
tableaux. They are truly classical in their restraint and in their
carefully composed, interrelated components of figure and ground,
black outline, color planes; not one element could be removed without
affecting the whole. His self-portraits, on the other hand, are
as visceral and intense as the figure groups are restrained and
detached. In his heavy, angst-ridden visage one can feel the psychological
depth and emotion that underlie his work and that inspired his impassioned
articles and lectures on art."
Excerpted
from exhibition catalog
text written by curator,
Andrea Packard and art historian, Robert M. Murdock, © 2001,
List Gallery, Dept.
of Art, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pa.
Jointly organized
by Swarthmore College and Haverford College, and curated by Swarthmore's
List
Gallery Director, Andrea Packard, this exhibition includes Leland
Bell's portraits, figure groups and still lifes. Its showing at
Oglethorpe University Museum of Art is a part of a tour of several
sites in the eastern U.S. which originated at Swarthmore College
in October 2001, with the final exhibit to be held at Salander-O'Reilly
Galleries, New York in September 2002.
Funding for the exhibition and accompanying
catalog was provided
by the Judith Rothschild Foundation, the William J. Cooper Foundation,
and the Swarthmore College Department of Art.
For additional information about Oglethorpe
University Museum events, call (404) 364-8555, or use our
response form
to email us.
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