With a splendid article reproduced here, an upcoming solo show, and a home and studio set into a breathtaking corner of the world, ProWax member Leslie Neumann is living the life.
"The Last Dog Standing in Arepika"
By Julie Garisto
Reprinted from Creative Pinellas, a publication serving the arts community in Pinellas County, Florida
Leslie Neumann stands on an embankment outside her home in
Aripeka, Florida
Photo by Daniel Veintimilla
The Celebrated Landscape Painter and Conservationist Chats Up Her Days With Rosenquist and Love of Beeswax
A stitched panorama of the view from Leslie Neumann’s
balcony
Photo by Daniel Veintimilla
Leslie Neumann wouldn’t
live anywhere else in the world — easy to understand as we gazed at an amazing
panorama of coastal marsh from her home-studio balcony in Aripeka.
We took multiple shots with the Canon and stitched photos in an attempt to capture the swath of tall skinny palm trees fortifying the horizon. They surrounded a wavy carpet of seagrass, mangroves and the deep-blue brackish water in Hammock Creek. A flock of Ibis whooshed by as an Anhinga vogued with her back to us, flaunting an elegant wingspan as she dried her feathers.
Neumann in her home studio next to one of her transitional
works that combine dramatic earth and cosmos. Photo by Daniel Veintimilla
Taking it all in, we understood a little better the magical
serenity and mystery evoked in Neumann’s encaustic/oil paintings — and the
natural grandeur that inspired the lifelong artist to become a conservationist.
“I love where I live so much that I don’t go out as often as
I should,” Neumann confessed. “Yesterday I was debating going to an event, and
an osprey landed on my balcony with a fish in its mouth. I took it as a sign
that I shouldn’t leave.”
Neumann has lived in New York and California but found her
perfect little corner of the world in the Florida town of just around 500
residents, 22 miles north of Tarpon Springs. When she started building her
house in 1989, a coterie of high-profile artists also called Aripeka home
— James Rosenquist, who
died less than a year ago in New York, Tony Caparello, Arline
Erdrich, Dan Stack and Steve
McCallum. McCallum, Stack and Neumann are the lone survivors. McCallum
has relocated to Ohio, and Stack lives in St. Petersburg.
“I’m the last dog standing in Aripeka,” she quipped.
In the ’90s, the Aripeka artists gathered for “hootenannies”
and lounged on the decks of each other’s boats. Rosenquist, according to
Neumann, was a gregarious and down-to-earth neighbor who didn’t like to be
alone. He enjoyed tinkering and entertaining and popped in from time to
time with a six-pack of beer.
Neumann and Rosenquist (back to camera) at her wedding with
Dan Stack in 1984. Photo courtesy of Leslie Neumann
“Jim brought the beer but moved onto to the hard stuff
pretty quick,” she clarified. “He liked to moon us!” she added with a hearty
laugh.
Rosenquist indirectly lured Neumann to Aripeka. The renowned
pop art pioneer and contemporary of Warhol worked in residence at University of
South Florida’s Graphicstudio,
where other major figures such as Robert Rauschenberg taught workshops and
contributed prints still in the studio’s permanent collection. While there he
met Stack, who became his studio assistant for 10 years during the ’70s and
’80s. Rosenquist fixed Stack up with Neumann and they got married. The spell of
Aripeka had eventually overcome Neumann, who worked as an art teacher in Queens
and split her time between Florida and New York.
Neumann’s neighbors glide by in a kayak during our
interview
Photo: Daniel Veintimilla
Her career improved exponentially in Florida. While she
endured the loss of friends and her mother and a divorce, she enjoyed a string
of successes, showing inClayton
Galleries, the Gulf Coast Museum of Art and the Morean Arts Center, where she’s now on
the Board of Trustees.
Neumann conceals feelings of loss with humor and moxie. She
riffs on adulting. As situations arise with chores and paperwork involved, she
shouts, “More homework!” and laughs. Yet, a visit to her immaculate,
custom-built home with natural light, high ceilings and a third-floor studio
seems to betray this notion. Meticulous portfolios on one side; pastel color-coded
files with neat handwriting on another. All the while, wall-to-wall windows
surround us with that amazing, distracting view.
The painter with her work, Rolling In, showing how a
window of a detail can become another painting. Photo: Daniel Veintimilla
Her assistant, Evelyn Pazmino, helps with day-to-day
business. Neumann, who doesn’t have children or go overboard on social media,
gushed about Pazmino graduating from Pasco-Hernando Community College with
honors on Facebook.
Neumann indeed values a solid artistic education and says
artists should have a foundation of learned skills before attempting to find
their own technique. Born in Plainfield, N.J., she received a BFA from the
California College of Arts in Oakland and a Master’s in painting from New York
University in Manhattan, followed by a fellowship from the New York State
Foundation for the Arts, an Individual Artist Fellowship from the State of
Florida, and an Artist Enhancement Grant from the Florida Division of Cultural
Affairs. In 2005, the Vero Beach Art Museum honored her with a 15-year
retrospective of her work.
A meticulous arrangement of paints, wax, brushes and other
accessories
Photo: Daniel Veintimilla
She says her dreamlike hot-wax abstractions came about quite
serendipitously. “In New York, I had a lot of artist friends. One said to me:
‘I painted on this board and I hate it. Do you want it?’ I said, sure. Another
friend said a few days later: ‘I painted with this wax and I hate it. Do you
want it? I said, ‘Sure!’ ( laughs) I needed the board to the paint with the
wax, and I thought, ‘Okay, I got what I need.’”
Neumann’s encaustic paintings show the poise and control of
a master with elements of unpredictability. She writes in her artist statement
that she’s inspired by the natural forces found in cosmic and terrestrial
landscapes. Neumann uses oil paint and applies the wax with a brush while it’s
still hot. After it congeals, she scrapes through to reveal another layer of
color; she then engraves pictographs, words and marks into the molten wax.
Neumann prepares to demonstrate her process. Partner Michael
Binford observes in the background
Photo: Daniel Veintimilla
“It’s not because I don’t plan ahead … my planning doesn’t
seem to matter,” she said during a demonstration. “My paintings have a life of
their own. They evolve and I follow them wherever they go.”
She jokes about her perceived inability to multitask. A perfectionist
who spends hours painting, Neumann says she likes to keep life as simple and
stress-free as possible. At 68, she’s vibrant, slender and healthy, crediting
yoga and meditation as her lifesavers.
We ask her questions while she works and she doesn’t mind
the interruptions — not too much anyway.
The demo featured Leslie Neumann’s Reflections 52 (Sea Fog),
24 x 52, in progress
Photo: Daniel Veintimilla
“This will drive you crazy, but the longer you know me, you
know I can only do one thing at a time … okay, I can do two things at once
(laughs). I can tell you this without breaking my concentration: The wax is of
made of beeswax, powdered pigment, what gives it its color, and a little bit of
Damar Resin, which is a binder. … I also paint with oil paint. Those pigment
sticks are oil paint in stick form. So, the oil paint and the wax are
compatible with each other. You actually don’t mix them together. That’s
verboten. You’ll see while I paint that I apply a layer of wax, a layer of oil
paint and a layer of wax. It’s truly an amazing process.”
Wellspring 44×36, Fiery Marsh 36×44, Blazing Heart 45×32.
All part of Wetlands series. Photo: Daniel Veintimilla
Neumann starts with an “underpainting” or sketches in oil
paint to get an overall idea, then she starts to apply wax, layering, and then
a shift occurs when it starts to look like something. “That’s when the
reluctant and disciplined editor must appear,” she says. “I don’t try to
replicate what I see, but what I feel about what I see.” Neumann’s tools include
a heat gun, iron and palette knife.
Michael Binford and Leslie Neumann share a toast on
Neumann’s balcony
Photo: Daniel Veintimilla
During our visit, she transforms a treeline to a dreamlike
scene with golden sunbursts that becomes more and more otherworldly as she
refines it.
Michael Binford, Neumann’s life partner for the past two
years, chats up Neumann’s cosmic paintings. I ask if NASA images inspired them.
Neumann says no; they’re from her imagination. Binford commented that he
noticed remarkable similarities when photos were released after certain works
were completed. A geography professor at the University of Florida, Binford is
a kindred spirit who’s studied and cherishes Florida’s primitive landscape.
“We’re very similar in where we are in our careers,” she
said. “He’s very passionate about what he does, and I’m passionate, and we love
to recreate together.”
Neumann is still passionate about conservation. She belongs
to the Gulf Coast
Conservancy, a 501C3 not-for-profit land trust, started in 1992. “I had
never done land conservation work prior to moving here,” Neumann said, “but I
was raised in a family that was very egalitarian and very involved in civic
matters. We liked to think that we could have a positive impact on the world if
we were just active and committed, so I had a long history of activism.”
The efforts of Neumann and others in the Conservancy helped
rescue 14,000 acres of coastal wilderness. “Our founding member, the now
deceased artist Arline Erdrich, must be credited with the idea that we could
either fight each injustice, fire by fire, or we could have a much more broad
and comprehensive manner of preserving land, which is what we choose to do,”
she explained. “So, with the help of other more established land conservation
groups, such as the Nature Conservancy and the Audubon Society and the Alachua
Conservation Trust, we put together an ambitious plan of creating wildlife and
nature corridors along the Gulf Coast in Citrus, Hernando, and Pasco counties.”
Work in progress for an upcoming exhibition
For the past several weeks, Neumann has been channeling
her love of nature and concerns into large-scale works for her next solo show, Leslie Neumann: Manna from Heaven…and Earth, at the Morean Arts Center this
spring. She’ll be showing new works in tandem with a group show, Water
over the Bridge: Contemporary Seascapes. Show dates are May 11 thru June 23.
“I’m using dramatic stormscapes; to express our current political
conditions,” she explained.
While Neumann has an undeniable activist streak, the joy and
the magic of being close to nature will always drive her muse most.
“I had an experience this morning that would you would have
really loved,” she shared via email. “I walked up to the bridge at dawn and saw
the eclipse of the moon as it sank in the west — and because it’s a supermoon,
the tide was super low. So there were hundreds and hundreds of wading
birds enjoying being able to fish in the mud flats.
"Ah, Aripeka.
"Is there any wonder I choose to stay here?”
. . . . .
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Thank you so much, Joanne, for reproducing this terrific article. I AM living the life, so true!
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