Madeline Ludwig-Leone
Secondary Source
Project Info
- đ Gattopardo
- đ€ Madeline Ludwig-Leone
- đ Angella dâAvignon
- đ Chris Hanke
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Madeline Ludwig-Leone, The New Model, 2025. Oil on linen 60 x 80 inches.
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Installation View
Installation View
Madeline Ludwig-Leone, Nature's Partner, 2025. Oil on linen 20 x 20 inches.
Nature's Partner detail view
Madeline Ludwig-Leone, The Importance of Lying, 2025. Oil on linen 11 x 11 inches.
Madeline Ludwig-Leone, Dreams of Arcadia, 2025. Oil on linen 26 x 30 inches.
Dreams of Arcadia detail view
Madeline Ludwig-Leone, Three, Four, 2025. Oil on linen 30 x 40 inches.
Madeline Ludwig-Leone, Glacial Erratic, 2025. Oil on linen 40 x 50 inches.
Madeline Ludwig-Leone, Cairns, 2025. Oil on linen 40 x 50 inches.
Cairns detail view
Los Angelesâ Painter Madeline Ludwig-Leone presents Secondary Source, a new body of work that investigates how the natural world is framed, translated, and ultimately controlled through systems of perception and representation. Drawing from traditions of Western landscape painting while quietly destabilizing them, Ludwig-Leone situates fragments of nature within constructed interiorsâwindow panes, floor planes, and beamsâwhere landscape becomes something staged rather than experienced.
A 2024 graduate of ArtCenter College of Design, Ludwig-Leone approaches painting as an inquiry into how desire and ideology shape vision. Her compositions reference the Hudson River School and artists such as Thomas Cole, yet instead of sublime wilderness, viewers encounter model trees, arranged stones, open books, and sharply defined shadows. These elements form what the artist describes as âinterior landscapesââstudio-bound scenes that expose the distance between lived environments and their romanticized cultural images.
Shadows act as the seriesâ central force. Repeated silhouettes stretch across flattened planes, suggesting solid three-dimensional forms while remaining visibly artificial. In Ludwig-Leoneâs painted world, it is perpetually just past noon, a suspended hour of crisp light and elongated shadow. The effect recalls Dutch painting traditions and memento mori symbolism, though here shadows replace skulls, becoming quiet markers of transience, mediation, and absence. What first appears observational reveals itself as carefully staged, toggling between the incidental and the constructed.
The work also reflects on still life paintingâs historical ties to colonial collecting and classification. By presenting books, rocks, and botanical signifiers as props rather than specimens, Ludwig-Leone critiques the seductive visual language through which Western art has long framed nature. Several paintings feature books written by her grandfather, a psychiatrist, whose titlesâThe Importance of Lying and The Price of Greatnessâintroduce themes of power, omission, aging, and memory. These personal references sit alongside boulders and studio objects, collapsing temporal scales from familial history to deep geological time.
Rendered in a deliberately spare visual vocabularyâhard edges, flat planes, and the conspicuous absence of living figuresâSecondary Source positions mediation itself as subject. The paintings ask how artists filter their surroundings, how landscapes become projections of aspiration or control, and how representation reveals as much about the observer as the observed. The result is a quietly uncanny series that invites viewers to look askance: not at nature as it is, but at the layered systems through which it is seen.
Angella dâAvignon