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STILLNESSES OF CANYONS
BY LEE HALL -
Tayloe Piggott Gallery is pleased to present Stillnesses of Canyons, an exhibition of paintings by artist Lee Hall on view in the gallery’s main space through February 15, 2021. Though a second-generation Abstract Expressionist her work was often shown among the first. Hall spoke frequently of her relationship to nature and its various elements that she has used as inspiration. Though abstract, the shapes Hall is inclined to paint are vaguely familiar, roughly geometric though softened with oblique angles and gentle tones. Her palette also hearkens back to the earthy palette used by Picasso and Braque when they worked closely in their cubist phases.
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In a speech Hall gave in 1981 at Rhode Island School of Design she explained, “I am, in brief, a landscape painter. All of nature—rocks, trees, mosses, flowers, horizons shifting and darkening or lightening, shore edges, mists, dawns, dusks, reaches of sky and sand, hills and valleys, near and far ridges, gentle or fierce clouds, sunrises and sunsets, and all the color and all the movements and all the stillnesses of canyons and forests are mine for the claiming and taming with a given day, in clear knowledge of that day's light.” A connection to nature is not a commonly heard cry from Abstract Expressionists, but Hall’s predilection for the natural world comes through in her painting even as it resonates as unequivocally abstract.
Many of Hall’s pieces feel like collages and also like aerial views of farmscapes or landscapes. “Epitaph” for example could be a farm with partitioned lots for a house? A barn? The garden, a yard surrounded by fields with a couple different crops, a driveway? The ambers, ochres and umbers, the greens, and purples are in the tones of the natural world, while the white might be the signs of a pastoral existence. Pareidolia (the tendency to apply familiar patterns to the unfamiliar—an elephant in a cloud, for example) intercedes and takes the mind for a fieldtrip.
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No images available.