7321 Beverly Boulevard • Los Angeles California 90036 • (323)933-5523 Fax: (323)933-7618
email: tobeymoss@earthlink.net
1916 - 2002
Leonard Edmondson's art career began at the University of California at Berkeley. After service in the Army, from 1942 to 1946, Edmondson embarked on a distinguished teaching career that has spanned five decades. Although renowned for his work as a printmaker, Edmondson has used a wide variety of media in his art. By 1950, he made an abrupt change from figuration to abstraction, cited by the artist as a journey of discovery of inspiration and meaning in his work.
Launching his distinctive style from abstract surrealism of Max Ernst and expressionism of Hans Hofmann, Edmondson's aesthetic vocabulary invokes ‘almost remembered' forms, feelings and spaces in his paintings, watercolors, etchings and screenprints.
Leonard Edmondson wrote: "This vocabulary
manifests itself in a dynamic structure where color responds to the
size
and position of shapes, and reinforces the intent of the
composition.
Lines close to make shapes that occupy shallow space. I am
equally
concerned with what I want to say and the formal values I use to say
it.
My painting is not art of rebellion but one of discovery and
sharing.
I have found satisfaction in the spontaneous, often compulsive, active
of drawing and painting."
Click on individual images for more information
Complete list of works at the Tobey C. Moss Gallery
Exhibitions at Tobey C. Moss Gallery:
| 2007 |
Leonard
Edmondson: Exploration of Abstraction |
| 2004 | Edmondson vs. Drewes: Relief vs. Intaglio |
| 2003 | Leonard Edmondson Memorial |
| 1998 | Leonard Edmondson: Images From Within |
| 1995 | Leonard Edmondson: Sensory Memory - Images, 1940s-1960s |
In ArtScene - About Leonard Edmondson
For more images and biographical data, email: tobeymoss@earthlink.net