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Click for Ann Arbor, Michigan Forecast
June 19, 2013
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Newspaper Diary

 

continued

Describing them (as she does in the subtitle of the show) as “trompe-l’oeil” (“trick the eye”) photographs is a distraction, because the whole idea of deception seems counter to the spirit of the artist and the show. There is no visual trickery here—no diffused light, no blurred edges, no wondering if you can pick up the book or reposition the newspaper clipping resting on it. Putting the title of the show aside (because to my mind it is not a diary, either, any more than my collection of newspaper tear sheets is a diary), Leonard’s photographs are arrestingly beautiful and historically astonishing.

The similarities of color, gesture, composition, and feel within each photo are striking. They include Emil Nolde’s painting Flood juxtaposed with the April 2010 news photo and headline “Volcanic Ash Grounds Air Traffic in Northern Europe,” and a 2006 news photo of a Peugeot factory in Slovakia photographed alongside a book reproduction of Diego Rivera’s 1933 mural “Detroit Industry.”

A departure from this is Leonard’s Anne’s Tree. This one touches more deeply because it brings together a book reproduction of the living chestnut tree that gave Anne Frank a sense of life during her years in hiding in Nazi-occupied Amsterdam and an October 2007 news photo headlined, “A New Wave of Support for Anne Frank’s Ailing Tree.” Says Leonard, “When I try to explain, to myself even, why my work is autobiographic, I think Anne Frank.” (Leonard was eleven years old when Anne Frank’s diary was first published in the U.S. in 1952.)

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