artists
LEO VALLEDOR (1936-1989)
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Leo Valledor was born and raised in the Fillmore district of San
Francisco. He was at the vanguard of the minimalist painting movement
in the mid 1970s, and a member of the influential Park Place Group
in SoHo. Art critics have placed his work in the league of Ellsworth
Kelly, Barnett Newman, and Leon Polk Smith. In a recent catalog
essay about Valledor’s work, curator Lawrence Rinder said,
“Abandoning the gestural language of abstract expressionism
(which would linger in the Bay Area for decades), Valledor started
to explore reduced palettes, geometric shapes, and the spatial dimension
of color.” Valledor’s work explores the juxtapositions
of colors and geometric forms as metaphors for the interplay of
elements in the natural world. Valledor studied art at the California
School of Fine Arts (now San Francisco Art Institute), and went
on to teach at his alma mater and at U.C. Berkeley. His work is
in the collection of the De Young Museum, Oakland Museum, Seattle
Museum, Philadelphia Museum, Crocker Museum, and Allentown Museum.
Reviews/Essays/Articles
Lawrence Linder, Everything Pellucid: The Paintings of Leo Valledor,
pp 1, 2
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