Featured in Texas Monthly

I’m thrilled and honored to have my story and paintings featured in Texas Monthly.

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By Jen Hamilton Hernandez

It’s First Friday in Lockhart, a night when merchants keep their shop doors open late and live music blares from a stage on the town square. The area is dotted with food and vendor booths for the night. As barbecue smoke wafts through the warm early-May air, the crowd is abuzz; we spot two little girls laughing and dancing on the Caldwell County courthouse lawn. My husband and I, newly vaccinated and having just left our son with a sitter for the first time in over a year, feel almost euphoric at the prospect of strolling the square, ducking into art galleries, and then eating dinner at a sidewalk cafe.

We walk toward Commerce Gallery, our first stop of the evening, for Leslie Lewis Sigler’s new show, “Familiar.” It’s a personal and professional homecoming for the Texas-born and -raised artist, who has called California home since 2006. Sigler has shown her work in galleries on both the East and West Coasts, but now her first gallery show in her home state is just eighteen miles from San Marcos, where she grew up. Inside the gallery, a former boot shop, some visitors are wearing masks and others are maskless. “I’m vaccinated now,” I overhear, as people lean in for hugs.

This phase of the pandemic—combined with Lockhart’s recent reinvention as a stylish town with boutique hotels, shops, and restaurants, but one that still holds on to its cowboy roots—feels like the ideal setting for an artist exploring themes of belonging, separation, and reconnection through her work. “Familiar,” which runs through June 27, presents a collection of Sigler’s contemporary oil paintings of silver family heirlooms—think trays, pitchers, and flatware—rendered in painstaking realistic detail.

Sigler’s fascination with silver objects began in her early twenties, when her grandmother, the family matriarch who lived in nearby Wimberley and brought everyone together around the table, started giving pieces from her silver collection to the artist for her birthday. One year, Sigler received a spoon with her great-grandmother’s monogram; another year, a silver butter dish. These gifts sparked curiosity about the inherited pieces, the lives they had lived, and the conversations, celebrations, and marriages they had been part of. 

The outlines of objects Sigler paints are crisp and tightly rendered. Silver Spoon #199, The Cowboy, a small painting at seven by five and a half inches, could at first glance easily be mistaken for a photograph of an antique pierced serving spoon with scalloped edges. Minute details of the handle’s pattern, plus the contrast between light and dark with shadows falling around the spoon, make it appear almost three-dimensional, as though you could grab it off the canvas and dip it into a jelly jar. But a closer look reveals brushstrokes in the bowl of the spoon, where the reflections take on a turquoise hue. Where does this color come from? The button-down shirt Sigler wore as she painted the spoon? Perhaps there were turquoise curtains nearby. These subtle surprises reward viewers who pay close attention.

Sigler began painting her own family’s silver in 2011, starting small with flatware at first. From experimentation with abstractions in the bowl of a spoon, the artist moved on to painting large platters. At sixty by sixty inches, The Legend is the largest portrait she’s painted to date, depicting a silver scalloped candy dish. In a short video describing the origins of her work and the steps in her process, Sigler recounts a story about a tea set that started her on the path to finding and depicting life in inanimate silver heirlooms. After seeing the silver set displayed at a friend’s house, she asked to borrow the dishes so that she could photograph and then paint them. “I noticed the objects in the set looked a lot like a family. The coffee and the teapot looked like two parents, and the creamer and the sugar looked like two kids,” Sigler says. “I started to see this family object as a family of objects.” 

Sigler’s own extended family still lives in Texas. She graduated from San Marcos High School in 2001 and then from UT-Austin in 2006 with bachelor’s degrees in design and studio art. In her studio art classes, she fine-tuned skills like color mixing, which she uses to render realistic-looking metal objects on canvas. “It was literally about learning how to see colors and mix colors,” Sigler says. “One day in a studio art class, I was squeezing yellow paint from a tube, and my professor said, ‘Do you really see yellow in that reflection?’” She didn’t. “Paint the colors you see,” the professor advised. During Sigler’s senior year at UT, her subject was a pair of shiny red boxing gloves, an early project in thinking about inanimate objects as lifelike portrait subjects and honing the skills needed to paint mini abstractions in the reflections of her subjects.

A mother of two, Sigler says that her hours in her Soquel, California, home studio are bracketed by the beginning and end of the school day. She says her process shifted before she became pregnant with her first son. When working on a series called Matriarchs, Sigler was rendering a pitcher. As she often does, she began to personify the objects as she studied them closely. “I loved the way the handle of a pitcher looked like a mother sort of standing with her hand on her hips,” Sigler recalls. “She was a voluptuous water pitcher, like the Madonna—or maybe that was just my subconscious wanting to become pregnant.” Now that her sons are four and six, Sigler says motherhood has changed the way she approaches her work. “I used to polish silver to perfection before I painted it. Now I photograph the object in its current state, then polish and photograph it, then let it tarnish and photograph it again so it has a sort of bronzy finish. As I’ve grown a family, I’ve embraced imperfection.” That shows in the patina of pieces from the “Familiar” show. In The Others, four silver serving pieces are jumbled together, each piece reflecting polish as well as tarnish and patina.

During the pandemic, Sigler felt especially isolated since she couldn’t fly home to see her family. “I’ve seen more and more the importance of family and the connections to family in my work as I’ve been raising my sons away from my family in Texas,” she says. Referring to her Silver series, individual small portraits of flatware and serving pieces displayed in a grid at Commerce Gallery, Sigler says, “I looked around my studio and saw all these objects alone, and I thought, ‘They’re lonely. I’m lonely.’ I had this longing to be in a crowd of people I love. So I thought, ‘How can we break the rules and be together? Let’s break the rules and put them all in a crowd.’” That led to paintings including “The Familiar,” a group of silver serving pieces that looks like the result of someone overturning a silverware drawer. Juxtaposed with her portraits of individual spoons, cake servers, and soup ladles, “The Familiar” is chaotic. Look closer, and you’ll see a pair of spoons, well, spooning, seemingly enjoying closeness after separation.

The crowd gathering at Commerce Gallery the first Friday in May is also a little chaotic and familiar. I overhear a woman commenting that one of the paintings is an exact match of her grandmother’s silver pattern. Sigler says at other shows, viewers often tell her that the portraits conjure long-forgotten recollections of the childhood chore of polishing silver before a family holiday meal. She likes knowing that her work dredges up old memories. “That’s what I’m doing in these paintings,” she says. “I’m honoring these objects because we inherit them, and sometimes they’ve been sitting in a chest or a dark closet for a long time.”

austin american statesman review of familiar

I’m pleased to share the Austin American Statesman review of my show Familiar by Michael Barnes.

LOCKHART — From a distance, the large object looks like something one might expect to see at a dinner table set for a feast at a baroque palace. A scalloped silver serving platter, perhaps, with an elaborate handle.

Turns out, heirloom silver dinner pieces — and how they behave in the light — are exactly the subjects of Leslie Lewis Sigler's painstakingly refined oil paintings, which can be viewed at the Commerce Gallery in Lockhart through June 27. 

The large object in question, seen in the painting titled "The Legend," pulls the eye to its center. The reflections in the grooves and the slightest shifts in the patina begin to look like feathering from some exotic bird, or the detached wing of an iridescent butterfly. Wait awhile longer, and the silver scallops melts into cool liquid, or rippling shapes that no longer relate to known materials.

Such is the case with many of the paintings, large and small, in "Familiar," which reintroduces Sigler to the Austin area. She grew up in San Marcos and trained at the University of Texas. She now lives and works in northern California. That qualifies her for the once-a-year, out-of-state-artist slot at Commerce Gallery, which specializes in Texas artists.

Owned by Donna Blair and Tamara Carlisle, who split their time between Lockhart and Austin, this gorgeous gallery, just over 2 years old, fills an old, shotgun-style retail space right on the Caldwell County courthouse square, which continues to add inviting new eateries, shops and attractions almost by the month.

Immaculately arranged, the current show includes a complementary set of paintings on the long northern wall by B Shawn Cox. He starts with photographs of cowboys, then overlays their heads with colorful patterns. On two central partitions, Molly Mansfield offers small paintings of greenery executed with loose, smooth brushstrokes.

Back to Sigler: These heirloom silver objects not only tell family stories, they take on personalities. One group of utensils, for instance, come with titles such as "The Dude and the Prince," "The Wannabe" and "The Beatnik."

Even those presented without such leading titles are lighted in ways that bring out raised details and subtle shadows. The larger silver objects — these are some of Sigler's first large-scale paintings — grow complex with their ridged surfaces that reflect back fabric, windows and other hazy phenomena that happened to be part of the room where Sigler painted.

Or did she pose them? That option becomes more likely after you spend time with these gems.

Some of the silver is strictly utilitarian, but many of the objects come with fantastical shapes that make them works of art in their own rights. Sigler sometimes piles multiple utensils on top of each other for effect, which automatically seems more intentional than the standalone treatments, and multiplies the shadows, shapes and colors. 

Her work is clearly informed by the historical legacy of still-life painting — one teapot could have been snatched from a Dutch museum — yet Sigler, as much by subtracting elements as by adding them, makes the genre her own.

Sigler is not just about surfaces and light. A mystery lies in the base of a platter in "The Revisionist." It reflects something alien that feels posed precisely for that effect. It's a bit unsettling.

Sigler pristinely attaches each painting to a frame or block of light-colored wood.

I don't know how the launch of this superb gallery escaped me. Add it to the long list of reasons to make that short drive down U.S. 183 for some recharge time in Lockhart. 

Leslie Lewis Sigler's "Familiar" runs through June 27 at Commerce Gallery, 102 S. Commerce St., Lockhart, thecommercegallery.com, 512-657-1850.

Michael Barnes writes about the people, places, culture and history of Austin and Texas. He can be reached at mbarnes@statesman.com.

Solo Exhibition: "Belonging" opens at Sullivan Goss in Santa Barbara, California

I’m pleased to announce my debut solo exhibition Belonging at Sullivan Goss gallery in Santa Barbara. At this time, the gallery is open by appointment, and the exhibition may also be viewed online at this link.

Leslie Lewis Sigler: B E L O N G I N G
Sullivan Goss, Santa Barbara, CA
May 29 – July 27, 2020

Leslie Lewis Sigler, The Empath, 2020. Oil on panel.

Leslie Lewis Sigler, The Empath, 2020. Oil on panel.

Left: Leslie Lewis Sigler, Silver Spoon #177, The Pretender. Right: Leslie Lewis Siger, Silver Server #15, The Enigma

Left: Leslie Lewis Sigler, Silver Spoon #177, The Pretender. Right: Leslie Lewis Siger, Silver Server #15, The Enigma

Leslie Lewis Sigler, The Intuitive, 2020. Oil on Panel

Leslie Lewis Sigler, The Intuitive, 2020. Oil on Panel

ABOUT THE WORK
Sigler's work is rooted in family and connection—how we belong together. These new works are belongings, once beloved and passed down through generations, nowadays many have been overlooked or even forgotten—their uniqueness and stories cast aside.

In 2018 Sigler relocated and adopted a new home, a new studio, different skies, different colors, different light. The reflections in Belonging represent her transition to a new place, and literally reflect her new surroundings.

The reflections contain compositions within compositions—abstract moments embodied within the shape of a common object. Sigler experiments with scale and tarnish, as these elements represent more difficult stories or less connected members. Hidden within the patina, vibrance, and detail of these object portraits are tiny distorted self portraits of the artist as she navigates where she belongs and does not belong in a new landscape.

Each object in Belonging exemplifies a path of experience and an individual way of connecting and belonging.

Leslie Lewis Sigler in her studio.

Leslie Lewis Sigler in her studio.

Upcoming Exhibition: JuxtaPOSE

I'm excited to announce this upcoming exhibition with a group of 4 amazing women. We'll be challenging the traditional understanding of portaiture through our different respective mediums. I hope you'll come to the show!

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American Art Collector Feature

Thanks to American Art Collector for the lovely feature in their December 2015 issue. See the full article here, and a preview of a few paintings that will be included in Revival at George Billis Gallery December 15, 2015 – January 23, 2016.

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