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Leonard Jubenville
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| Biography Leonard Jubenville lives
on a farm outside a small French-Canadian village, Pain Court, in
extreme Southwestern Ontario. He is married to Sharon, a retired
secondary drama teacher, and has two sons: Corey and Julian. He is a
graduate of the Ontario College of Art and Design in graphic design,
and the University of Windsor in Anthropology. He is a well-known
artist in the region, and has exhibited in many of the galleries of
this area, and also in Michigan. His works hang in many collections of
public galleries, as well as numerous corporate and private collections. Picasso is
reported to have said, "Art is a lie by which the truth is revealed". I
thought long on this, and concluded that no, a lie always remains a
lie, and can never reveal the truth. Art, rather, is a different kind
of truth than one usually considers when one encounters the idea of
truth, as in, for example, painting, sculpture, performance, or any
other form of art, is contained in itself, since the work created is
its own reality, its own world. When I am painting a canvas, I am
always aware of the fact that what I am doing is creating a world, a
reality, if you wish, that is not real, since reality and nature are
infinitely too complex to paint (nature defined as every thing in the
universe seen and unseen), but rather creating a reality and world
which exists within the margins of the picture planes. I am not lying
to reveal the truth. I am, rather, creating a different truth, the
truth of line, shape, colour, texture, tint, and tone, and how they
come together and interplay on a particular canvas created with paint.
The idea of creating a particular work may come from what I see and
feel around me when I go sketching, but what has caught my eye,
heightened my senses, or inspired me, are only a few aspects on nature
and reality which have been filtered and interpreted into a painting.
These ideas inform the basis of my painting, from choosing a size to
fit a subject matter, the composition I lay out, the colours I choose,
and the textures I paint. At some point in the process of painting this
world, a reality will start to emerge, and rather than my telling the
painting what I want it to be, it will tell me what I must do to
complete it. The success of the work will depend on how well I have
listened to the truth of this world of paint on a piece of canvas. |