Leah Poller “Mirrors of the Soul”

Knox Gallery

poster for Leah Poller “Mirrors of the Soul”

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Since her classical training at France’s most prestigious fine arts academy, Les Beaux Arts de Paris, Harlem sculptor Leah Poller reaffirms her attachment to figurative art in her upcoming exhibition “Mirrors of the Soul”. The portraits in bronze, while simultaneously real and surreal, personal and universal, embrace figuration with vigor, in opposition to the years of abstraction most familiar to the art world.

“Any single square inch of a Rembrandt painting, when magnified, is as good as the best non-figurative art,” explains Poller. “In my work, I seek the same quality: taken as a whole, it is definitely representational but throughout the work I have planted tasty morsels that could rival any abstract art we know if enlarged ”, she states boldly.

Poller uses a return to the figurative as a means to create a psychological portrait of her subject. Ann Landi, contributing editor to Artnews Magazine says “What most impressed me about her process (aside from sheer technical virtuosity, a rare quality in today’s art) was the amount of time she spends getting to know a subject”. In fact, Poller likens herself to an amateur psychologist, digging deep into her subject’s inner thoughts through multiple conversations, in order to find the defining element which, in her approach “positions the subject in space”. From that point on, the challenge is to turn the subject inside out, carefully extracting elements that are symbolic of the deeper self to provide visible, external markers that lead the viewer into identifying with the an emotional resonance that vibrates though all mankind.

For her upcoming exhibition at the Knox Gallery, she executed a portrait of legendary jazz musician Fred Ho, an Asian – American master of the saxophone. “As someone highly self-conscious about my legacy due to the reality of stage 4b metastatic cancer, I have been thrilled with Leah’s imagination and desire to imbue and radiate my spirit and energy as the subject of her sculptures”, acclaims Ho.

Art critic Siba Kumar Das, upon seeing Poller’s sculpture of Ho said, “I thought of the emotional power attributed to Bodisattvas. In this, she creates a continuum of figurative communication, just as Bodhisattva images do, by offering to the viewer an incarnation of compassion.”

[Image: “Michelle Ange” from Woman Warrior Series, Bronze 33 x 13 x 35 in.]

Media

Schedule

from April 11, 2013 to October 11, 2013

Opening Reception on 2013-04-11 from 18:00 to 21:00

Artist(s)

Leah Poller

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