Frenhofer, Balzac’s enigmatic character, was chosen to lend his name
to this exhibition by Miki Leal. An aging artist, he was obsessed with
finding a way to transform what he painted into real life. His was an
obsessive, lunatic, almost pathological quest which eventually led him
to attain the perfect, coveted lucidness of the painter who sees nothing
in his canvas but brushstrokes, colour, light and tonal mass. ‘By dint
of much research, he has come to doubt the object for which he is
searching. In his hours of despair he fancies that drawing does not
exist, and that lines can render nothing but geometric figures’.
Frenhofer the outrider, the forerunner, a victim of his own misunderstood
genius has, over the years, come to symbolise the classic obsession of
contemporary painters whose mark is revealed in such revolutionary
artists of the 20th century as Cézanne, Picasso, Rilke and Schönberg.
Miki Leal’s admiration for the mad old painter stems less from an
identification with the person himself than with his unknown masterpiece.
What really fires this young artist about the aging painter was his
search for a work which, while imperfect, would come closest to an
exact conjunction of applied, pure thought—the idea and material
execution of that idea on the canvas (‘it is as easy to dream up a
painting as it is difficult to execute it’). It is thus a case of seeking the
absolute or, as the artist has said on occasion, ‘a search for authenticity’.
That accounts for the variety in his work, in his subject matter, in the
characters that people the landscapes in Miki Leal’s canvases, ever ready
to reveal a mystery, or to plunge us into them—landscapes which may
originate from within or without the painter’s world; in his head, in a
print or in the homely ambience of La Laguna, Miki Leal’s place of
work and residence (‘the mission of art is not to copy nature but to
express it’).
Existing paintings, or those which grow as they are painted—their
glazes and layers of paint on paper attest to this process. Paintings
which, in short, try to allay Frenhofer’s fear, that ancestral fear felt by
the artist or by man: ‘I am but a man who, when walking, can but walk.
Thus, I will not have produced anything’.
María José Solano Franco |