[2] Stephanie Snyder describes Léonie Guyer’s work as the following: “The richly layered, albescent grounds of Léonie Guyer’s most recent paintings are inspired, in part, by the creamy surfaces of ancient Greek white-ground vessels, by the work of painters such as Piet Mondrian (1872–1944) and Giorgio Morandi (1890–1964), and by natural materials such as milk, bone, and chalk.
Guyer mixes her paints by hand from raw pigments, often restricting her palette to the “ancient” primary colors (iron oxides, yellow ochres, and mineral-based blues), in addition to various blacks and whites.
Hand-mixing paint is an intimate, timeconsuming, and repetitive activity, resulting in modest batches that settle and cohere in accordance with the subtle variations of each particular admixture of pigment, linseed oil, and mineral spirit.
No two batches are the same, recalling the ancient philosopher Heraclitus of Ephesus’s observation that “You cannot step twice into the same river.” At the core of Guyer’s paintings and drawings is an awareness and embrace of life as a vulnerable and temporary moment within a measureless, universal continuum.”[3] In his exhibition text, Anthony Huberman, the Director and Chief Curator of CCA Wattis Institute, writes: “Léonie Guyer makes paintings and drawings.
In her mind, an artwork is a place where countless decisions are condensed and compacted together, and she works to intensify that concentration by keeping her paintings small and reduced down to their bare essentials: color, surface, and shape.
Better would be to say that she makes “immeasurable” works of art, which doesn’t mean that they are epic in scale but simply that they are not meant to be measured.”[4] In 2024 Guyer was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship.