
Leon Kossoff British, 1926-2019
Exhibitions
30 September - 4 December 2021
Annely Juda Fine Art, London
Page no.71 Illustrated in colour
Anthony Caro: 6 Sculptures, Leon Kossoff: 6 Paintings 19 September - 17 October 2020: Annely Juda Fine Art, London
From London: Bacon, Freud, Kossoff, Andrews, Auerbach, Kitaj British Council, touring exhibition
1 July - 5 September 1995: Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh
22 September - 5 November 1995: Musée Nationale d'Histoire et d'Art, Luxembourg
16 November 1995 - 31 January 1996: Musée Cantonal des Beaux-Arts, Lausanne
16 February - 7 April 1996: Fundació Caix de Catalunya, La Predera, Barcelona
Reproduced in colour no. 27
Leon Kossoff, Recent Work
22 March - 27 April 1984: Fischer Fine Art, London
15 November - 15 December 1984: L.A. Louver Gallery, Los Angeles
Illustrated in colour p.7
Literature
Andrea Rose “Leon Kossoff, Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings” Published by Modern Art Press, London, 2021. Page 325 Illustrated in Colour, Catalogue Raisonné No.252
Robert L. Pincus, ‘Leon Kossoff’, Artforum (New York), vol. 23, no. 8, April 1985, p. 101 entitled ‘Fidelma’
Text from “Leon Kossoff, Catalogue Raisonné of the Oil Paintings”edited by Andrea Rose, 2021:
“The art critic Robert L. Pincus singled out this picture (together with a second painting of Fidelma) in Artforum after seeing Kossoff’s solo exhibition at L.A. Louver, Los Angeles, in 1984:
Ultimately, he achieves a great measure of control over the effects of his paintings; they strike a delicate and resonant balance between gesture and structure, feeling and intellect, historical knowledge and original vision. If naturalistic visual fact dissipates in, say, Fidelma 1981, or Fidelma Lying on the Bed, 1984, what takes its place is an intriguingly unstable image of the female figure. The fluid contour of her body appears to merge with the ground, leaving the lighter tones of her flesh floating in pictorial space, yet an underlying structure is always present in Kossoff’s use of traditional poses. It is the push and pull of the historicist and the (late) Modernist in him that animates his painting, giving it authentic power and visual eloquence ... (Pincus 1985, p. 101)”