Shortly after winning the prestigious Absa Atelier Award, Leonie E Brown disappeared from the art world. Now, after many years, she returns with a trademark touch of magic.
Leonie E Brown Re-invented
“I won the
National Volkskas Atelier Award for fine art in 1983. The university
I was studying at didn't want to write me in. John Botha, my art
history lecturer and Natascha Pretorius, a friend of mine, believed
in me when no-one else did. They submitted two of my pieces, both
were accepted and the one piece won.”
But the rosy glow of the young artist's unexpected victory did not last.
“The year after I
won the Atelier Award was terrible. I was filled with pain,
loneliness and sadness. In some ways, artists are prophetic people.
We reflect our personal or socio-economic present or future
situations through our work. My work then was very harsh, angular and
angry. I used a lot of cold colours and hard surfaces. Most of my
work was done on hardboard.”
“I employed
texture to shock and repel, a palette knife to scratch and unsettle
the viewer. I re-created my misery in my work. It's painful looking
at yourself in a mirror during cold seasons. So I quit.”
Her sojourn away
from canvasses lasted 14 years, taking her to many places she might
never have been had she continued as a solo artist. Teaching high
school students art in Lichtenburg, working as a graphic designer in
Cape Town, living in Czechoslovakia, designing labels for wine
bottles are some of the things Brown did.
“Life was tough
but I was learning what varsity couldn't teach me- who I am. All
those different things I did taught me some invaluable lesson.
Working as a graphic designer, for example, taught me how to work
with finer details.”
In 2000, the year before
Brown got married, she found herself standing in front of a canvass
once again. And when the canvass had been worked, she stood back,
startled by her creation.
“It was as if
though I'd been re-invented. I realised that somewhere along the
line, I had found an inner peace. I wanted to share that with the
world but in a way that allowed the viewer to see his own soul, not
mine, through my work. At first I was cautious, just brushing up on
old skills. As my confidence rose, I began experimenting. I believe
good art is produced by artists who continually develop their
technique, style and change their subject choice.” Brown says.
“I've always been
a traditionalist. I wont cut holes into a canvass, splash blood onto
it and then stretch a dog skin over that. I enjoy working on a
canvass using oil paints to create the picture I have in mind and
experimenting with different styles, techniques and tools.”
Many South African artists
around today became well known because of experiments that turned
out well. For instance, Derric Van Rensburg. He uses pieces of
cardboard to create beautiful landscapes. Or how about Paul Du Toit?
He uses his left hand, his non-dominant hand, to great effect in
creating his child-like impressions.
Now Brown has
joined that impressive list with a quirk of her own. In one of her
latest landscapes, aptly titled “Coming home,” a rustic farm
house stands in a field of golden grass. A mud red road runs parallel
to it and off into the distance where a powerful mountain range
guards the horizon. A pale blue sky holds soft white clouds in its
expanse. Layers and layers of colour shine through each other to
create an out of focus effect very similar to pointillism. But unlike
pointillism, Brown has managed to create a soft lace like finish with
very few hard edges.
“When I started
painting, I used brushes. My paintings had a flat finish. So I began
experimenting with impasto. I fell in love with the textures created
by applying oodles of paint. People wanted to touch my work because
of it, so I started using a palette knife in conjunction with the
brushes and an impasto technique to enhance the effect. Later on I
only used palette knives.”
“One day I got
frustrated with the effects I was achieving. I grabbed the closest
thing to me, let's call it my little secret. I tried that on the
canvass and immediately saw the potential. Now I feel comfortable and
confident working with my new found tool. I only use a palette knife
to create hard edges.”
Her work encompasses a
wide range of subject matter and styles. From figures to landscapes
and abstract to realism.
Brown has always used wet
on wet, scraffito and vibrant colours to create the effects that she
wanted. She still employs these techniques but in conjunction with
her new technique she obtains a much more fluid and expressionistic
feel than before.
Her works can be
seen in top galleries around South Africa and Germany, where she is
quickly building up a big following, or on her website at
www.lifeart.co.za
1 comment:
nice story. where was it published?
Post a Comment