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CAVIN-MORRIS GALLERY

  • Exhibitions
    • Current Exhibitions
    • Upcoming Exhibitions
    • Past Exhibitions
    • THE REAL SURREAL PART 1: New Paintings by Shneider Léon Hilaire
    • Spotlight: New Work by Auguste Elder
  • Artists
    • Self-Taught (A-L)
    • Self-Taught (M-Z)
    • Contemporary
    • Ceramicists (A-L)
    • Ceramicists (M-Z)
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  • Fairs
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RIDDLE: WHAT IS A MAN - PAINTINGS BY LEONARD DALEY

(May 9 - June 15, 2024)

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Leonard Daley
White Egg
, 1993
Mixed media on pressed board
21.25 x 23 inches
54 x 58.4 cm
LE 6

 

Leonard Daley (born ca. 1930s- died 2006 in the parish of St. Catherine, Jamaica) is the trickster mystic of the Jamaican self-taught artists (called the Intuitives in Jamaica).  Rastafarian by inclination and experience, his work, at once naked and revealing nothing, is some of the most complex in Jamaica.

I think of Daley’s paintings in the same frame of reference as Dub music, once restricted to reggae in Jamaica, now globally used from reggae to jazz.  The basis of this music, begun in Lee Perry’s Black Ark music studio, is the removal of the narrative melody line to reveal the intricate interplay of the percussion, bass, and rhythm guitar.  Effects are added by the dubbing DJ or producer consisting often of echo, repetition, fadeouts and ins, and deep reverb.  Another important dub technique is the sudden removal of elements to create aural holes and spaces in the fabric and weave of the music.  Often samples of sounds and other music are collaged in as well. In Jamaica, dub reggae picks up many layers of meaning when the rhythms have Revival or Rastafarian resonances.

Leonard Daley
Living in Green
, 1993
Mixed media on canvas
36 x 36 inches
91.4 x 91.4 cm
LE 8

Leonard Daley
Staring Down the Bull
, 1993
Mixed media on canvas
34 x 27 inches
86.4 x 68.6 cm
LE 11

Leonard Daley
Untitled
, 1993
Mixed media on tarpaulin
27 x 31 inches
68.6 x 78.7 cm
LE 16

By removing the obvious narratives in his paintings Daley encouraged us to see some of the deeper movements in the art mixed with the visual wordplay of his fast-moving, cagey mind.  His personal connections between the multiple events are de-emphasized yet still serve as reference points, such as when he used the vulture (John Crow bird) as an autobiographical indicator.  Some of the characters, like this bird, and a bull that once threatened his life, do reoccur painting to painting. 

Leonard Daley
Untitled
, 1993
Mixed media on canvas
20 x 20 inches
50.8 x 50.8 cm
LE 18

Leonard Daley
Murray Mountain
, 1993
Oil on canvas
31 x 52.5 inches
78.7 x 133.4 cm
LE 29

Leonard Daley
Why
, 1993
Mixed media on canvas
52.5 x 28.5 inches
133.4 x 72.4 cm
LE 9

Leonard Daley
Spotted Goat
, 1992
Mixed media on zinc
36 x 27 inches
91.4 x 68.6 cm
LE 52

Leonard Daley
Life is the Best I
, 1993
Mixed media on canvas
35 x 23 inches
88.9 x 58.4 cm
LE 53

Leonard Daley
Untitled
, 1996
Mixed media on canvas
32.75 x 25.5 inches
83.2 x 64.8 cm
LE 22

Leonard Daley
Problem
, 1993
Oil on canvas
32 x 29 inches
81.3 x 73.7 cm
LE 32

 

In his artmaking Daley was laying out the situations--personal and social, spiritual, political--that were often both real and symbolic at the same time.  He wanted to involve the viewer’s participation in the outcome. He, in an almost Afro-Futurist  manner, telescoped the details of time so that he showed past, present and future as simultaneous.  This is a trait of Rasta reasonings as well.  “Reasonings” are a free-form forum when the brethren and sistren discuss events, prophecies and philosophies.  For this reason, the paintings also often have an accretional aspect, as Daley may overpaint and add elements at various times.  The rhythm of the painting is ongoing; it is the perceptions of the viewers that change and morph.

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

Leonard Daley
Yellow Face
, 1992|
Mixed media on canvas
21.5 x 15.5 inches
54.6 x 39.4 cm
LE 39

Leonard Daley
Marjorie
, 1994
Mixed media on canvas
26.5 x 38 inches
67.3 x 96.5 cm
LE 42

Leonard Daley
Untitled (Red Crab)
, n.d.
Mixed media on plywood
14 x 25 inches
35.6 x 63.5 cm
LE 54

Leonard Daley
Humpy Dumpy What The Best
, 1992
Mixed media on canvas
55 x 37 inches
139.7 x 94 cm
LE 44

Daley’s themes were hardships, striving, gossip, man’s inhumanity to man; and the battles of Good vs. Evil in the common mans’ daily life.  He lived in Kingston a long time before moving to the countryside.  He grew with the urban Rastafarian movement.  But even his Rastafarianism was often tested by self-questioning and self-haranguing; a constant challenging of the concepts of righteousness and holiness.  Daley took nothing for granted, not even the way words sound.  David Boxer, Director Emeritus of the National Gallery of Jamaica said “He is simply a painter who, I feel expresses his own demons, his own fears by fixing them through paint on a variety of surfaces”.

On my first meeting with Daley, he sat me down and said “I am going to riddle you.”  I nodded.  He said “What is a man?”  I gave 5 lame responses.  He never gave me the answer.

This is his first one-person exhibition in the United States.

For additional information please contact info@cavinmorris.com or call us at 212-226-3768.

Leonard Daley
I Am A Melon
, n.d.
Mixed media on canvas
45 x 70.5 inches
114.3 x 179.1 cm
LE 51

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Press:

Check out John Drury’s review of the show in Whitehot Magazine here: https://whitehotmagazine.com/articles/mountaintop-at-cavin-morris-gallery/6435