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CAVIN-MORRIS GALLERY

  • Exhibitions
    • Current Exhibitions
    • Upcoming Exhibitions
    • Past Exhibitions
  • Artists
    • Self-Taught (A-L)
    • Self-Taught (M-Z)
    • Contemporary
    • Ceramicists (A-L)
    • Ceramicists (M-Z)
  • Publications
    • Catalogs
    • Books
  • Fairs
  • Appraisals
  • Fieldnotes
  • Accessibility
  • New Arrivals
  • Contact

THE BUSH HAVE EARS: LEONARD DALEY & RAS DIZZY (October 13 - November 23, 2016)

View fullsize  Leonard Daley Why, 1993 Mixed media on canvas 52.5 x 28.5 inches 133.4 x 72.4 cm LE 9
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Creativity Arts Time, 1998 Tempera, oil on matboard 15.25 x 11 inches 38.7 x 27.9 cm RD 81
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Untitled, 1993 Mixed media on canvas 20 x 20 inches 50.8 x 50.8 cm LE 18
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy If You Knows When Sleep, 1993 Tempera on matboard 16 x 12 inches 40.6 x 30.5 cm RD 13
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Humpty Dumpty What The Best, 1992 Mixed media on canvas 55 x 37 inches 139.7 x 94 cm LE  44
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Mr. Pine is a Dr., 1991 Tempera on matboard 14.5 x 10.5 inches 36.8 x 26.7 cm RD 28
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Yellow Face, 1992 Mixed media on canvas 21.5 x 15.5 inches 54.6 x 39.4 cm LE  39
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Behold - Who Is This Man? Can You Say?, 1993 Tempera on matboard 14.75 x 18.5 inches 37.5 x 47 cm RD 34
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Why Do Scouts Like Go Camping at the Blue Mountains that's in Jamaica, 1997 Tempera on matboard 10.5 x 17 in  (26.7 x 43.2 cm) RD 54
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Problem, 1993 Oil on canvas 32 x 29 inches 81.3 x 73.7 cm LE 32
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy I Will Be Back, 1992 Tempera on matboard 18.25 x 15.5 inches 46.4 x 39.4 cm RD 65
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy The Big Money Race at Zans Park, 1998 Tempera, oil on matboard 11 x 15 inches 27.9 x 38.1 cm RD 79
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy A Face of Urining Political Election in Voilence City, 1998 Tempera, oil on matboard 15 x 10.5 inches 38.1 x 26.7 cm RD 82
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Love is Not Talk Love is Kindness, 1993 Oil on canvas 46.25 x 29.25 inches 117.5 x 74.3 cm LE 10
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Zin is Expected at Berth Town Shefield..., 1998 Tempera, oil on matboard 11.5 x 16 inches 29.2 x 40.6 cm RD 84
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Helmet, 1991 Oil on canvas 26.5 x 17.5 inches 67.3 x 44.5 cm LE 33
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy The War Ocean, 1998 Oil, tempera on matboard 11 x 15.75 inches 27.9 x 40 cm RD 89
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Birds Creativity..., 1998 Oil on matboard 9.75 x 15.75 inches 24.8 x 40 cm RD 91
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Marjorie, 1994 Mixed media on canvas 26.5 x 38 inches 67.3 x 96.5 cm LE  42
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy The Dread, 1998 Oil, tempera on matboard 14.25 x 10.75 inches 36.2 x 27.3 cm RD 98
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy When Marshall John Reaches Star 17..., 1998 Oil, tempera on matboard 17.75 x 11.75 inches 45.1 x 29.8 cm RD 103
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Untitled, 1996 Mixed media on canvas 32.75 x 25.5 inches 83.2 x 64.8 cm LE 22
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Trees of the Jamaica Tropical, 1998 Oil, tempera on matboard 15.25 x 9.5 inches 38.7 x 24.1 cm RD 113
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy The Clock of Osanah Calds Us home by Time and Prophicy, 1998 Oil, tempera on matboard 15.25 x 11 inches 38.7 x 27.9 cm RD 123
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Con Teng Qual Dalok Amanda, 1996 Mixed media on canvas 33.5 x 36.75 inches 85.1 x 93.3 cm LE 21
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Inspiration , 1998 Oil, tempera on matboard 11 x 17 inches 27.9 x 43.2 cm RD 124
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy On the Tropical of Kingston , 1999 Oil, tempera on matboard 16 x 13 inches 40.6 x 33 cm RD 132
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Living in Green, 1993 Mixed media on canvas 36 x 36 inches 91.4 x 91.4 cm LE 8
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy The Blue Gardena, n.d. Acrylic, tempera on board 16.5 x 13.125 inches 41.9 x 33.3 cm RD 135
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Murray Mountain, 1993 Oil on canvas 31 x 52.5 inches 78.7 x 133.4 cm LE 29
View fullsize  Leonard Daley Untitled, 1993 Mixed media on canvas 39 x 23.5 inches 99.1 x 59.7 cm LE 12
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Tomi Scott - One of the Shefield Cowboys, 1988 Tempera on matboard 20.5 x 14.24 inches 52.1 x 36.2 cm RD 7
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy A Surprize to the Big Race Day, 1993 Tempera on matboard 16.5 x 23.5 inches 41.9 x 59.7 cm RD 21
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy On Some Island These Birds, 1991 Tempera on matboard 13.5 x 17.25 inches 34.3 x 43.8 cm 13.5" x 17.25" RD 22
View fullsize  Ras Dizzy Rose Choice, 1997 Tempera on matboard 16.75 x 10.5 inches 42.5 x 26.7 cm RD 46

THE BUSH HAVE EARS: RAS DIZZY & LEONARD DALEY
(October 13 – November 23, 2016)

Ras Dizzy (1932- 2008) and Leonard Daley (1930- 2006) are two of the most important painters to emerge from the second generation of self-taught Jamaican artists born from 1930 to 1949, including Albert Zion, Evadney Cruickshank, Kingsley Thomas, Albert Artwell, and others.  

Rastafarianism began to change Jamaican culture in 1930.  Many artists were not actually Rastas, but they adopted many of the philosophical outlooks and the cultural resistance of the Rasta movement, similar to the way the counter-culture of the sixties affected lifestyles world-wide without everyone necessarily becoming hippies. 

Jamaicans growing up in this time were enveloped in post-slavery and post-colonial issues and religions, such as Revival and Kumina (a Kongo-based religion begun in Jamaica by post-slavery indentured servants).  Many Jamaicans emigrated to Panama and England to work, and and those who returned found less than desirable economic conditions. Despite outlawing Obeah (Jamaican hoodoo), the colonial powers in Jamaica were not as successful as the white Americans in suppressing African and pan-African spiritual impulses.  Rastafarianism incorporated many Kumina customs in its tenets and lifestyles. 

Neither Dizzy not Daley were anything but freewheeling in their spiritual outlooks.  Dizzy was a poet before he became an itinerant artist.  He wandered the island with his paintings under his arm to display and sell to people.  Daley was a maverick philosopher, a cantankerous riddler who covered the walls of his house with what I call his ‘dub’ paintings. He was continually painting and repainting them at will so that they became a restless journal of his reasonings and questioning of social life.  Dub is a form of reggae and post-reggae music in which the lyrics are removed and cut up to create a soundscape where rhythm becomes the narrative and the meaning is ambiguous and constantly changing. Daley is a master of powerful visual ambiguity in his thickly painted layers, not unlike work from some of the North American artists like William Hawkins and Thornton Dial. 

Ras Dizzy is closer to a classic art brut artist but he never sacrifices his canny insights on both real and fantastical worlds.  He works from his culture.  He references a prophetic location called Sheffield as his visual home ground.  There life is filled with deep color; reinvented palm trees, mysterious market women, cowboys, fantastical boats, extremely detailed horse races, Rastafarians, etc.  But Sheffield is not always peaceful.  Demonic beings he calls monopolys also live there.  Each Dizzy painting is a rich pool of subtle and not so subtle color that resolves into meditative abstractions.

They were both obsessed with music from early American jazz to mento, reggae and dancehall.  Their work is amuletic also, like much African American vernacular art.  It serves as a marker of survival and a visual form of oral culture.  The work of Ras Dizzy and Leonard Daley holds its magic close to its chest, but reveals great depth to those who open themselves to it.

 

For further information please contact Cavin-Morris Gallery at info@cavinmorris.com, or phone: 212-226-3768.

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Thursday 10.13.16
Posted by caroline casey
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