"A lake is the earth's eye; looking into which
the beholder measures the depth of his own nature."
Thoreau.
Warren Woods
24 x 24 inches. oil on canvas.
Project: Landscape.
Private Collection.
In 1995 Lenkiewicz returned to an adolescent preoccupation - Landscape. In early youth
he would stare out of the window from the bed he slept in, mesmerised as so many young
people are, by the huge swathes of clouds mounted in the sky like a vast cathedral vault.
It was difficult at that time to grasp that the sky ceiling was the largest dome on the
planet, but one could certainly understand why clouds were called 'the thrones of gods'. A
small exhibition of his at St. Martin's School of Art com prised of 20 drawings of steam,
recorded from the trains at Paddington Station. Only in recent years has Lenkiewicz
returned to working in isolation in woods or by a lake, where he planned a large project
titled 'Landscape: The Painter as St. Jerome'. This project was intended as an enquiry
into the relationship between natural forces and a single person. Forty of these paintings
were shown at The Barbican Museum and Library Annexe. He wrote:
"In youth every window, every door opening framed the world outside.
There were two kinds of space, the intimate space where I stood and the exterior space
that one could believe expanded consciousness. The larger the space observed the more
timeless, meditative, even exalted one could feel. Space has been termed a 'Psychological
transcendent'. The larger the context in which we stand, the greater our solitude. Our eye
eliminates boundaries, nothing contradicts; distance shuts off moral codes. "
In student days when Lenkiewicz visited The National Gallery, which was frequently, he
was struck by the images of St. Jerome, and in particular a small panel by Patinier. From
the early 17th Century images of St. Jerome had developed into theatrically lit excuses
for recording ,sinewed, taut and wasted elderly men - almost an illustration for medical
students studying anatomy, of cadaverous musculature. Before this phase however, St.
Jerome would be hard to find, as he sat lost in a vast, stony and desolate landscape
traversing rivers, forests and mountain peaks. The clear purpose of such imagery was
existential; man lost, missing, in a terrifying infinity. Man insignificant. Images like
these are the stuff of tragedy; late Michelangelo, late Goya, late Rothko. Lenkiewicz
wrote:
"All human enterprise seems to evaporate into the vapours that we
inhale and exhale by seeing. Seeing is eating, our visual mouth can swallow universes,
exhale the starry night. When we are moved we are filled. To be touched by things is to be
made smaller, to be diminished. In one aesthetic mood we ride clouds and leapfrog oaks, in
another we sleep beneath a leaf and nestle with insects. Space is a state of mind,
agoraphobic and claustrophobic. We are strangely haunted by events that are innocent of
themselves, we do not cry "Show off" to nature. We are silenced into meditative
irony, diminished and expanded, an elastic perception of minutiae one moment and infinity
the next. "
In future developments of this project Lenkiewicz intends to expand the themes of
Earth, Air, Fire and Water.