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"You can't explain a painting. It explains itself, if
you give it a chance."
LEON POLK SMITH
Leon Polk Smith admits to being one of the twice born; art too
claims its converts. Seated in his New York apartment, which also
hosts his studio, he speaks softly and serenely of the life art
has shared with him. The air is surprisingly fresh and relaxed,
it doesn't feel like New York. His living room is cool and bright
from a crossfire of east and west exposures, high up they overlook
Union Square on one side and face a cathedral of water towers
on the other. Only Smith's paintings dress the walls, and they
light the room with an elegance which is betrayed only by their
jaunty and jubilant spirit. He explains that while he is an ardent
art enthusiast, all of his ideas come from his own works, and
they serve him well by being where he can look at them. He speaks
with a gently rhythmic but a touch crusty southwestern accent,
and there is still a shadow of the rugged frontier about him,
which can be traced back to his work.
"I discovered art my last year in college ... 1934. Having
grown up in Oklahoma and having been older than the state, there
wasn't much art there. So it was still younger than I at college
age, and I had never seen an original painting. I don't think
I knew anyone very well who even had art in their vocabulary.
And it's quite by accident that I discovered art. That last year,
I was in a building I had never been in before, walking down the
hall, looking into the rooms as I passed. . . and this room had
students and they were painting and drawing. And somehow that
fascinated me immediately. I thought: I wish I could do that.
And l went in and asked the instructor if I could come in and
work for the rest of the term. He said yes.
I think I realized very quickly that I had always been an artist,
and that that was what I wanted. That Iwould always keep it for
myself, that I would never prostitute it, or do anything with
it just for money.
I had prepared to be a teacher. When I started school, I said,
I want to be a teacher, and it never entered my mind.... Even
after I discovered art, and said I was going to be an artist,
I knew that to make a living I would do what had been my first
choice, which was teaching. I taught for about twenty-five years.
After I finished college, and taught one year, I came to New York
in 1936 to study at Columbia ... get my Masters ... education
and psychology. I knew I wasn't going to start selling paintings
(he laughs). Paintings didn't start selling to somehow support
me until about 1957. That's when I stopped teaching. "
From the awesome horizontality of the Oklahoma plains to New York's
concrete peaks and valleys, Smith's one preoccupation has been
space. From the late thirties through the early fifties it was
the Constructivist space of Mondrian which dominated his scope:
pure rectilinear abstraction with a parity of positive and negative
form. Like many others working under the mast of Con-
structivism, Smith was looking for the next step up, a stage further
in the evolution. Some painters pursued lyrical abstraction, but
these solutions sat too self-centered to excite him. So he pushed
on.
Center Column Blue and White, 1946
"When I discovered this thing in 1954, of dividing a canvas
into two areas, painting in two colors, I did about twelve to
fifteen tondos before I was able to carry the idea over into the
rectangle. Because I discovered the idea on a circular format,
you know I must have told you about seeing this athletic catalog
... the illustrations that were done that were pencil drawings
rather than photographs, of a baseball, tennis ball, football
... that came into my studio, that was in the mail. I don't know
why it was sent to me ... found myself going through the catalog
... looking through the drawings. certainly was not interested
in any of them as a baseball or a basketball, but I was looking.
And I thought, what the hell am I doing this for, why am I looking
at this ? And a little voice says, because that's what you're
looking for ... that excited me and l knew immediately what it
meant. I rushed into my studio, got some paper and a compass and
started drawing circles and dividing themup. Then lhad to start
inventing my own break up. I was inspired. Because that presented
what was I looking for?
"When Mondrian died, I think 1945, people said he had hit
a dead end, or a stone wall and I said I don't think so. There
is no such thing as a stone wall except in one's mind. I said
to myself, I think it would be wonderful to use his great discovery
of the interchange of elements of form and space, or background--
foreground, although he only used it at a direct angle or a straight
line--if one could find a way of using that in curvilinear form-and
that's what I was looking for, all through the forties ...
"I certainly wouldn't have gone to an athletic catalog to
find it, but that's where I found it. Of course the shapes and
lines were very limited, and immediately had to start finding
my own, which I did. But then that created a space there that
I had never seen in painting before. It was flat and at the same
time it was curved. It was like a sphere. The planes seemed to
move in every direction, as space does. And so I thought, maybe
that is because that's on the tondo. I've got to find out if that
is true or not. I've got to do some on a rectangle to see if the
form and the space still moved in every direction. And it did.
So it was exciting to do a painting on a rectangle that seemed
to have a curved sur-
face. It was the first time, you see that I had made an important
step myself, or contribution in art. "
Color and shape are the converging planes which form the fulcrum
over which Smith see-saws his space. They form the language of
which he is a master. Color and shape are his domain; the crossbars
of his scope; his words. With them he writes poetry; poems which
magnificently sweep their time and space into a single gesture.
In space there is no up or down; up here is down there on the
otherside of the globe. Smith enlarged the concept of space in
painting to meet with the twentieth century, everything moves
at a diagonal. He first started experimenting with this in the
rectilinear Constructivism of the forties; he implied lines which
moved diagonally between points. Later he exposed the diagonals
and still maintained a vocabulary of implied lines. Both are central
to his dialogue, especially today.
New Moon For August, 1983
In the multiple panels Smith takes the concept of positive/negative
parity one step further. He invites the surrounding space into
the experience, and activates it into an equal exchange. The painting
becomes a point of departure - a runway into space.
We sense the awe in this work, and wonder. These latest paintings
are of a dimension so large, so fast and so deep, they tower like
futurist space machines, seeming to pulsate on the threshold of
infinity. Smith constantly talks of excitement as though itwere
an essential. He has a faith in what art can do, and be, and this
is supremely evident in his work; so much so that with it he restores
even our doubt in the doubt intrinsic to both.
". . . lsn't it simply wonderful to be able to paint? That's
what l wanted to do. Now I can - It's something I would pay to
do, if I were able to, if I had to.
ADDISON PARKS
August, 1982
Reprinted Courtesy of the Joan Washburn Gallery
Green, Two Black Edges, 1984
There is a hard and fast line drawn in Leon Polk Smith's work
that has been there for over three and a half decades. It has
been in his life forever. You could call it the broad hard-edged
horizon spanning the Oklahoma plains where he was born and raised,
or the rigid constructs of Mondrian's radical planar abstractions
which inspired Smith so profoundly in the Thirties.
Both of these are true, but more than anything else surely, that
line is the strong and steady path of a wise and fiercely indomitable
optimist. In Smith's latest paintings the presence of that line
is greater than ever, and with it comes the impact of something
great, something that can be sensed.
Rori-Blue,Red,Blue, 1988
In these paintings Smith has introduced an element which has
its roots in planar abstractions he has been doing since the early
Fifties. It is that line, black and hard and fast. Not always
as straight as it is now, but it has always been there; independent
and yet unified, and also unifying. In these new paintings, however,
its purpose has taken on a new dimension. Now it helps Smith do
better something he has been doing since way before it became
either an issue or a trend in painting: bring the surrounding
wall into the picture and take the picture out into the surrounding
wall. But this wouldn't be the first time Smith has preceded a
trend; Op. Minimalism, hard-edge, and monochrome were just a few
to follow his lead. If Smith's paintings are so breezy in spirit
that the canvases float like kites in the sky and soar, and they
do, then it is the line that brings them back to earth and reunites
them with their environment.
Constellation No.5, 1972
The evolution of Smith's own radical oeuvre began in the early
Fifties with the tondo, the round canvas, a final departure away
from Mondrian. Since then he has worked with regulated symmetrical
shapes like folding screens, squares with rounded corners, and
joined multiple canvases, always using unmodulated planes of color
joined on a hard-edged seam. More recently he began using irregularly
shaped canvases, placing them in tandem but not necessarily joined.
The diagonal, as much a part of his oeuvre as the circle, played
a critical part in carrying the viewer into the work and off into
his space. These irregular shapes were very successful at turning
the wall around the work into the work and then back out, so that
the relationship became one of a figure-ground. This naturally
meant that the wall would take shape with the work, thereby enlarging
the sphere of the work's activity.
Floating Black, 1984
In one of the very latest in that series, Smith uses a white
plane in the picture to further the merging of canvas and wall.
The blue shape skyrockets while the wall moves into the white
plane and behind Liie blue. At the same time the white plane,
ellipse-shaped, can work independently and press up against the
blue and act like a color. It can even become the primary shape
in the painting, making the blue fall away. It is interesting
that color is something unfettered by any prejudice with Smith.
Interesting but not surprising. For him all colors are beautiful,
are good, are of equal value, are fresh.
Most recently it is the black line that assumes the burden of
unification between the work and its environment. Smith has literally
attached a wooden straight-edge, painted black, to the perimeter
of his canvas frames to lock on along one or two sides and extend
off the corners and out into the surrounding space. It reminds
us of what he has always made clear through his work, that space
is not just out there but all around us. If there is one thing
that this work brings home, it is that we live in space and we
can all realize that space. It is also interesting to note just
how complementary this work is to not just space but people. Its
color, scale, and shape are as human as they are modern.
If one looks at work Smith had done even forty years ago, it is
still so fresh; yet looking at this recent work one is struck
by how it brings us right up to the edge of time, our time. It
may anticipate the future, but more than anything else it gives
us that like-no-other feeling of facing the elements (destiny)
on the bow of a great ship with the ocean (frontier) parting at
our feet. It's this-is-now, dammit, wake up! That's great, and
it doesn't happen very often.
This work speaks magnificently for itself, so what am I running
on about? Hell, I'm just trying to keep track of its wake. Still,
more than anything else, more than its power to define our space
and time, which is so tremendous it is sometimes hard to deal
with, it is the poetry of color and shape in this work that makes
it mean so much. They are probably one and the same thing, but
each painting is like a new take on life, another all-things-being-equal
way of saying keep on, because it is out there: Hope. This is
the kind of sight(vision) that gives credence to art-as-celebration-of-life,
which by now is sadly well shopworn. But I don't forget it. The
strong line in Leon Polk Smith's work is life line.
Addison Parks, 1985; Courtesy ARTS Magazine
Three Chosen Space Areas/Activated by Poetic Energy/LINE=Where
Two Space Areas Converge
1995 Wall Drawing, The Brooklyn Museum
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