Lindy Lee, Dark Star, 2006
6 April 2006
Lindy Lee – Trueworld and the Pilgrim
13 October 2004
Lindy Lee - The Secret of the Golden Flower
20 November 2003
Lindy Lee – Ten Worlds, Ten Directions
24 October 2002
Lindy Lee - Cycles Through a Chinese Landscape
26 April 2001
Lindy Lee – Trueworld and the Pilgrim
13 October 2004
The reproduced artwork, like a photographic portrait, has a peculiar relation to the real. In Lindy Lee’s paintings, the presence of a face is both denoted and revealed as an illusion of saturated pigments. This strange double-bind of perception, as it encounters photographic representation, is a continuing theme in Lee’s work. Her paintings have always contained facsimiles of ready-made portraits. These operate as a retrieval of subjects from an obscured past, as meditations on being through time.
The current exhibition at Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery, Trueworld and the Pilgrim, marks the tenth anniversary of
Colour is of paramount importance in Lee’s compositions. Like figurative work, Lee believes that colours can stand as images in themselves, as in the powerful abstract red-on-red of True World (2004). Of the colours in Trueworld and the Pilgrim, Lee states, “The predominant colours in the exhibition are red and purple. Red is the colour of life, corporeality, blood, matter… Purple, the marriage of red and blue (life and spirit) is the colour of the pilgrim. The purple is rich, dark and fecund - full of enormous potentiality and because of this very potentiality, the pilgrim’s path is often a path of great difficulty.â€
Since the early ‘80s,
Naomi Evans
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Lindy Lee has been represented by Roslyn Oxley9 Gallery since 1986. She has shown extensively both in Australia and internationally in important museum exhibitions, including the1985 Australian Perspecta, the 1986 Sydney Biennale, Prospect ‘93 (Germany), Edge to Edge: Contemporary Australian Painting to Japan (1988), Transcultural Painting (toured throughout Asia 1994) and, Photography is Dead, Long Live Photography, Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney (1996). She is a founding member of Gallery 4A in Sydney’s Chinatown and her work is held in most of Australia’s major public collections, including the National Gallery of Australia, the Art Gallery of New South Wales, the Art Gallery of Western Australia, the Art Gallery of South Australia as well as numerous corporate and private collections.
Exhibition opening:
Exhibition dates: 14 October –
Gallery hours: Tuesday–Friday
