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Dennis
Leon, Altered
Rock, plywood, 115" x 112" x 84"
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For many years,
art professionals have sought innovative ways to bring contemporary
art to the general public by establishing alternative art venues
outside the walls of museums and galleries. Perpetual Objects,
the Oakland Museum of Californias latest foray into nontraditional
art spaces, launches a changing exhibition series in the museums
newest satellite venue, Gallery 555. This groundbreaking
exhibit, on view from April 18 through July 10, 2002, celebrates
the work of artist and educator Dennis Leon.
Perpetual
Objects is the inaugural show at Gallery 555, an innovative
fine art exhibition space made possible by a partnership between
the Oakland Museum of California and Shorenstein Realty Services.
Perpetual
Objects features seven large-scale sculptures and two collage
drawings by Leon, whose work has earned him a place in many national
and international museums. Leon was born in England in 1933 and
spent much of his childhood exploring the nearby moors of Yorkshire.
It was during these walks that Leon developed his lifelong passion
for landscape.
After receiving
his Masters from the Tyler School in Philadelphia, Leon moved to
Oakland in 1972 to become the Dean of the Sculpture Department at
the California College of Arts and Crafts where he remained as Professor
Emeritus until his death in 1998.
Throughout
his career, Leon drew upon the natural world around him for inspiration
in creating his monolithic works. Nature is made up of lots
of little pieces and things, yet its unity is implicit, said
Leon in 1990. Nature is the birthplace and diary for memory.
Nature doesnt notice my dilemma of being simultaneously in
it and an observer of it.
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Dennis
Leon, Beach Stones #7, collage and pastel, 60"
x 89"
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The geological
sculptures seen in Perpetual Objects assert the depth
to which he was influenced by the sensuous topography of Northern
California. In Altered Rock, irregular sheets of plywood
secured with screws and glue tower over us to resemble an outcropping
of rock. In Rock Face #5, Leon systematically burned, scarred
and marked the surface to resemble craggy rock faces. In Proscenium,
a monolithic mass of rock that has been cast in bronze asserts its
quiet presence and unmistakable inertia. Even in his drawings, one
senses the hand of a romantic and descriptive draftsman, seeking
to capture a sense of time passing.
When contemplating
his work, Leon wanted the audience to be open-minded, to resist
interpreting the pieces in a narrative or didactic context. One
can almost sense his silent encouragement to move beyond the pictorial
and physical characteristics of the artwork and to focus inward
on what already exists within ones own psyche. Our memories
and past associations with nature are at the core of Leons
artwork, not newly felt emotions or learned experiences. Leons
objects exist to share their history with the viewer and in doing
so, they illuminate parts of ourselves we didnt know were
there.
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