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Learning to Fly, 48 x 36, Leslie Allen at Donna Seager Gallery
Oyster Shell Court, 48 x 48, Leslie Allen at Donna Seager Gallery
Delta Flyover, 36 x 35, Leslie Allen at Donna Seager Gallery
Puzzle Terrain, 36 x 35, Leslie Allen at Donna Seager Gallery

Mentor, 36 x 35, Leslie Allen at Donna Seager Gallery

Leslie Allen: For Paint's Sake

December 16, 2009 - January 30, 2010
Reception for the Artist and annual anniversary party
Saturday, January 9, 6 to 10pm

It seems that Leslie Allen has the distinction of having one person shows during very special celebrations. Her first exhbition, Taking the Plunge was held during the time of our wedding reception which took place in the gallery. This exhibition will mark the happy celebration of our fourth year of business. Having made it through one of the most difficult years in over 30 years in the art business, this is no small sigh of relief and this is no small accomplishment on the part of Leslie Allen as well. She has provided us with a new series of works that are luminous and complex. Each and every painting hits their mark. You won't want to miss this exhibition.

Leslie Allen is a painter’s painter.  She approaches the canvas without preconceived notions and allows the process to guide her through the painting.  She immerses herself in the development of the painting as it occurs, responding to every mark with a keenly developed improvisational style.   Allen relishes the pure color and movement of oil paint on the surface.  She “listens” to the paint.  She has worked out her own visual language through years of experimentation and exploration.  These are sophisticated paintings with a keen sense of color, gesture and division of space.  Though you would have to relate her work to Abstract Expressionist paintings of the forties and fifties in their reliance and trust in process, Allen’s work is more lyrical than the New York school – less concerned with “not being beautiful”.  Her color sense and gestural style might relate more to Joan Mitchell, but with an understanding of the structure and “bones” of a painting that relates more to Bay Area abstractionists such as Frank Lobdell or Richard Diebenkorn.  These paintings invite you to travel through them and explore the sensations that arise from allowing yourself to experience the work.  


 
851 Fourth Street, San Rafael, CA 94901 Tel: 415-454-4229 art@donnaseagergallery.com

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