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Fred
Schwartz, New York Architect by Mel Leipzig, acrylic on canvas, 36 x
52. Images courtesy Gallery Henoch, New York, New York. |
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The idea gives me chills. For me, painting
is all about color schemes and giving the color wheel a workout. It is the
kaleidoscopic chroma that draws me in, and I usually spend more time entranced
by the colors I've mixed on my palette than actually applying paint to my
surface. When I found
out that nationally renowned artist and professor Mel Leipzig creates his
large-scale figurative paintings with just four colors I was surprised. I'd seen
Leipzig's works before and never noticed that his palette was limited-likely
because his skill as a colorist enables him to use each color in a multitude of
ways.
Leipzig has always worked with a limited
palette. He started with eight colors, but in 1990 cut that number in half to
just Hansa yellow medium, cobalt blue, quinacridone crimson, and white. Given
the color deficit, you'd think Leipzig would choose subjects that fit his
palette's capabilities, but he doesn't. The artist doesn't seek out low lighting
or label his works as "moody" to coincide with the colors he has available. In
fact, he paints solely from life, often leaving the controlled environment of
his studio for locations where he has no say over the objects in the scene or
the lighting available.
In his painting Fred Schwartz, NY Architect
, Liepzig's use of a limited palette offers an effective counterbalance to
the busy scene. The view stretches back across several bays of windows and into
the far expanses of a loft filled with papers, books, and furniture. Despite the
visual cacophony, the whole scene is harmonious, largely due to use of a
concentrated few colors.
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Urban Word by Day
by Mel Leipzig, acrylic on canvas, 42 x 67. |
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The viewer's eye travels through the space,
touching on the yellows in the left foreground's wooden model and brick
buildings out the window to the middle ground where the subject, in a
warmer-toned shirt of the same color sits against a wall of the same color. The
blue in the posters on the right wall is repeated throughout the scene as well,
in the ceiling, support beams, and even the shadows along the surfaces of the
objects throughout the painting. The cohesion in the vast space could have been
lost if the artist hadn't put the palette's variety to good use, and in the same
way the painting could have been boring if Liepzig didn't create a rhythm with
color that leads you through the painting. |
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