Lee Lee
biography
contact
surround
breath
cycle
place

 

- environment - area - condition - landscape - atmosphere - scene -

surround

roadkill

As we continue down our path of over-consumption we get nearer to mass extinction. I created this series of road kill drawings to reflect the decimation of our environment by our current lifestyle. I photographed the animals in Texas, where it is illegal to remove carcasses killed on the highway. The animals were left to be picked clean and decay, so manifest the full process of disintegration. I feel it is important to bring attention to the current state of the environment as we depend on the natural world for our own survival. The works carry a warning for the future if we continue to allow what is happening through our current disregard of the environment.

view roadkill drawings

 

 

 

right: sparrow - detail; pencil and tar on paper, 2008

materialism

 

 

The pine beetle has killed 98% of Colorado's lodgepole pines, leaving behind whole mountain valleys cloaked in the rust color of dead forest. Warmer winters have allowed the beetle to flourish as they are usually kept in check by over a month of subzero temperatures.

 

view pine paintings

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

right: pine; oil on canvas, 2007

Lee Lee - painting of dead pines in Colorado

bleeding forest

In the last couple of years, groves of aspen have started bleeding to death. Their unexpected demise has baffled the scientific community, but it is believed that this new virus is caused by global warming.

 

 

right:
source material for series of oil on shotgunned panel paintings of the current state of aspen in Colorado. 2007

bleeding aspen

Colorado

Landscapes from my homeland.

 

 

view spring aspen paintings

view fallen spruce field studies

right: Aspen; oil on shotgunned panel, 2007

Lee Lee - Aspen Grove in Colorado

UXO

A new crop of unexploded bombs and landmines emerge from the earth after every monsoon season in Southeast Asia. Laid down over a generation ago, their presence demonstrates how the effects of modern warfare does not end upon the signing of a peace agreement, but goes on to affect communities around the world for decades.

 

 

view UXO monoprints

right: UXO; drypoint monoprint with burnt chine collee, 2002

flower

opposing the energies of creation vs destruction as well as masculine vs feminine.

 

right: lillies; oil on shotgunned plywood, 2005