www.leonardcohenart.com

News about Leonard Cohen and his work, press, radio & TV programs etc.
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jarkko
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www.leonardcohenart.com

Post by jarkko »

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Leonard is signing one of the prints for the Richard Goodall Gallery


Information about the Exhibitions in Toronto and Manchester has already been posted in many threads but here is some more!
World Premiere Exhibition, part of the Luminato Festival, Toronto, June 3 - 30, 2007
Drabinsky Gallery, Toronto, in association with the Luminato Festival, Toronto, and the Richard Goodall Gallery, Manchester, UK, will present the world premiere exhibition of works on paper and annotations by Canadian poet, songwriter and novelist, Leonard Cohen.

The next exhibition will be in Manchester at the new Richard Goodall Gallery in July 2007. This will be the European Launch of the Leonard Cohen Art.


"Drawn to Words features more than 30 pigment prints of drawings and sketches selected from Mr. Leonard Cohen’s extensive private archive stretching back over 40 years. Images from Drawn to Words will include portraits, nudes, objects and landscapes, many of which are annotated with Cohen’s personal notes, observations and musings."

"Some feature recognizable characters from his songs, while others reflect his changing moods through revealing self-portraits. Drawings that capture views from his Montreal apartment, alongside pictures drawn during his five-year seclusion as a Zen Buddhist Monk at Mount Baldy Zen Center are included in the collection."
Many of these drawings have previously been posted on The Blackening Pages of The LC Files.

You may also buy these prints online. To see all the drawings, and more, go to http://www.leonardcohenart.com
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linda_lakeside
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Post by linda_lakeside »

What a great pic. Leonard seems to be one those people that can do 'anything'. He's a very good artist and could easily hold his own in a show/gallery. He seems to undertake each project with tremendous seriousness - if he didn't work, he'd likely wither and die.
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Sophia
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Post by Sophia »

Jarkko, which drawing is actually the "Grecian"? The one he is signing in picture is called "Page 48" in blackening pages and "Grecian" is "Montreal woman" in http://www.leonardcohenart.com. Just curious... :)

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Post by jarkko »

I guess he has studied his notebooks carefully now for this project, and found the original names. I recall that many years ago, when we started to post these works of art on the site, the titles were more or less given in email correspondence.
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Post by tomsakic »

Also, when I had the opportunity to print dozen of artworks in an art magazine here, he gave different titles, not those under which the drawings were published at The Blackening Pages. I think some of them were changed again in Book of Longing's index pages.
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Post by tomsakic »

Good article here:
http://www.thestar.com/entertainment/article/219109


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Must-know info for art lovers

For those interested in viewing and possibly purchasing works of art by Leonard Cohen:

Each of the images is available in limited-edition prints of 100 each, with prices ranging from $1,500 to $4,500 (both figures U.S.) depending on size. (Framing costs extra.)

For those with thinner wallets, a soft-cover catalogue is available at $25, and unframed posters will be on sale for $15 (both figures Canadian).

Art collectors and Leonard Cohen fans from various U.S. and Canadian cities are coming to town to see the stage show, take in the gallery exhibit and possibly buy some Cohen prints.

In his poetic introduction for the exhibition, called "If There Were No Paintings," Cohen assesses his own artistic accomplishment with the self-deprecating phrase "acceptable decoration."

The Drabinsky Gallery (on the north side of Scollard St., just east of Hazelton) will be closed for the next few days before the official public opening on Sunday afternoon. It will be open daily during Luminato.

The Cohen prints will remain on display throughout June, even after Luminato ends, but the gallery will revert to its regular schedule and will be closed on Sundays and Mondays.
Drawn to Cohen's artistry
TheStar.com - entertainment - Drawn to Cohen's artistry

May 30, 2007
Martin Knelman

"When you see it all at once, the emotional resonance of the work is incredible," says Garth Drabinsky. "You have the entire history of Leonard Cohen's life in front of your eyes: the elation, the romanticism, the agony and the anguish."

The showman who once brought you cinemas with espresso bars and Broadway musicals such as Ragtime now invites you to savour pictures on a wall by Leonard Cohen.

You'll recall that Drabinsky ran a movie empire and a live-theatre empire. What is sometimes forgotten is that the Drabinsky Gallery at 122 Scollard St. has been quietly promoting Canadian art for almost 17 years. But it has never been quite the centre of attention it is bound to become this weekend with the opening of "Drawn to Words: Visual Works from 40 Years" as part of Luminato, the new arts festival.

This marks the debut exhibit of an artist who has previously chosen to keep his drawings more or less private, and now after 40 years of doodling for the amusement of himself and his friends, has decided, at age 72, to put his images out there.

Though Cohen has lived mostly in Montreal and Los Angeles, he has a certain affinity for Yorkville, which in the fabled 1960s was the place to hang out if you craved poetry readings and folk music.

As Robert Kory, Cohen's Los Angeles lawyer, explained: "It all came about because of Philip Glass, who had proposed setting Leonard's poems to music."

When it came time to develop the stage set, the designer had the idea of using some of Cohen's images, especially the ones in colour.

"One thing led to another," says Kory. Manchester dealer Richard Goodall had already secured European rights to Cohen's art.

Cohen was in New York working with Glass on the stage show (which will have its world premiere at the Elgin Theatre on Friday), when it occurred to them that the visuals in the show should lead to an art exhibit. The producer, Linda Brumback, brought the idea to Luminato's attention.

"This is a perfect example of what makes festivals so exciting," says Janice Price, CEO of Luminato. "Things just take shape because of the creative energy involved when everyone from different art forms is thrown together."

Price had appointed producer Don Shipley to program a section of the festival known as Illuminations and Shipley loved the idea. Price and her general manager, Clyde Wagner – who had both worked for Drabinsky in his Livent days – said if there was going to be a show, it should be in Yorkville, where Luminato was already planning a Summer of Love street event recreating the late 1960s.

"My immediate reaction was that we would be thrilled," Drabinsky recalls. "But we didn't want to be just swept up in crazy excitement. We had to be sure that we could protect the integrity of the work and the quality of the catalogue. And we felt we could proceed only if Leonard truly believed we were the right people to represent his work."

That's why Wagner and Linda Book, manager of the gallery, flew to L.A. for discussions with Cohen and Kory.

Book asked the artist whether he was excited about these plans. To which Cohen replied: "I am not excited. But I am very happy."

It was a chance for the artist to decide: Deal or no deal. He chose to say yes.

----------------------------

And some photos of artwork are in slide show at The Star's site, http://www.thestar.com/photoGallery/219010

"Woman in rays and hand in sand #2".
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"F-full woman in rays"
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"Watching you think"
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"Woman and horse"
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"He was kind"
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"Back in Montreal"
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"It was the hat"
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"Just to have been"
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"Still looking"
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"Vibrant but dead"
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"My house in winter"
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"Paris again"
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"The hat"
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"Purity of Dominique - small"
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"Dear Heather"
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Young dr. Freud
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Post by Young dr. Freud »

As Robert Kory, Cohen's Los Angeles lawyer, explained: "It all came about because of Philip Glass, who had proposed setting Leonard's poems to music."
Please tell me that guy is not still on the payroll.


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tomsakic
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Post by tomsakic »

Slide show of 14 drawings is also at The Globe and Mail website, http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/ ... y01?slot=1

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kaczor47
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Post by kaczor47 »

Interresting, I do not see 'Watching you think' at the Richard Goodall website (leonardcohenart.com), and I was under the impression that they list the complete catalogue. I am assuming that it will be shown in Toronto....
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Post by margaret »

I wonder how many of us here can afford those silly prices.

Think I might settle for an unframed poster.
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Post by kaczor47 »

margaret wrote:I wonder how many of us here can afford those silly prices.

Think I might settle for an unframed poster.
Silly indeed. You know, margaret, at the risk of sounding like a whiner (as i have expressed my opinion on the prices in another thread), I too was surprised when I found out what the cost is. Perhaps with the recent discussion on Sony's greed I am overly sensitive to this issue... (btw, I refuse to buy the re-masters since I don't believe the extra tracks belong on the albums - they are a composition, and I equate Sony's move to adding a few brush strokes to a painting and marketing it as 'new and improved'. Why not just put them all on a separate disk of outtakes!?). Of course there are those who believe that it is worth what the market will bear...

I never feel comfortable discussing matters of pricing on this forum, as I prefer to talk about the art itself (music, poetry, sketches...whatever the incarnation may be). The bottom line is that I have a lot of admiration for Leonard's work, and seeing the various drawings submitted through Jarkko's site over the years, has really made me appreciate his (Leonard's) ability to express himself in that form.

anyway, I have rambled enough...

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Post by Alan Alda »

After reading there was to be a poster and a catalogue available I emailed the Drabinsky Gallery and found out there is an unsigned catalogue for 25. A Signed catalogue for 75. And the poster, which is the colorful "Grecian Woman" for 15.

I was told these items can be purchased via email.

And yes, the artwork prices are (insanely) high. I hope the reasoning behind pricing most folks out of being able to afford them is a sound one for their ultimate purpose. (meaning I hope they do sell well). Even at half the price being asked, I'd have a problem with the cost, but would consider it. As is, there is no way...

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Post by kaczor47 »

Alan Alda wrote: And yes, the artwork prices are (insanely) high. I hope the reasoning behind pricing most folks out of being able to afford them is a sound one for their ultimate purpose. (meaning I hope they do sell well). Even at half the price being asked, I'd have a problem with the cost, but would consider it. As is, there is no way...

Laurie

Here is a question I have, and perhaps Jarkko would be able to answer this: I was under the impression that a lot of Leonard's work was done on a computer? Does this mean that there exist no originals? Or am I incorrect in the above assumption, i.e. have some/all of them been actually drawn (on a surface other than a (computer) tablet) ?
Last edited by kaczor47 on Mon Jun 04, 2007 4:02 am, edited 1 time in total.
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jarkko
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Post by jarkko »

The color drawings come from Leonard's original notebooks, and he has made most of the self-portraits also on paper.
(If you have a look at many of them you will still see the lines of the notebook pages!)

We have a selection of computer-made items on the Blackening Pages as well, but I think only few of those have been
copied to this selection.
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Post by medicinejar »

I am a little surprised at the prices too. I understand why the larger ones would cost so much but I am surprised there not some smaller pieces of art available at a price average fans could afford. At these prices, I am out of the game.

Cheers
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