How is it that one man can work on one brushstroke (and a few spots) for almost two years? I thought about the oriental calligraphers who spent a lifetime perfecting that one brushstroke. Suddenly, the silence and loneliness of the painter’s profession pierce through my heart.
Leaf shows a simple fold of translucent green paint that appears as a gesture of concealment, of implication, as if the smallest mystery of nature, the greenness of a leaf, was being held and protected within a fold of pigment.
Small reservoirs of oil and Liquin leak from the top edge of the mark, and where the green stroke has carried over to the frame, the paint shows as a dark varnish, barely perceptible.
With consummate economy, Leaf draws together nature and art and shows how natural things live within and despite history.
Leaf is about the ‘time of plants’ but also about the long durée which the single brushstroke spills. The painted wooden frame was added later.