Excerpt:
Leon Martindale began painting at the age of 58 in an
attempt to, as he describes, 'keep [his] brain active'
and to control the increasing physical problems he was
experiencing due to the effects of Parkinson's. Prior
to this, he had worked in a variety of jobs including
on a chicken farm and as an assistant photographer for
Westland Helicopters. Currently, he manages his own
digital print business operating between England and
the Philippines.
Martindale describes his experience of art up to his
first attempt at painting as being that of an interested
amateur; he had dabbled with various creative activities
and even undertaken a three-dimensional design course
at some point, although he had, until the onset of his
Parkinson's, never tried painting. In 2004, Martindale
attended a recreational painting class, but quickly
found that he was 'no good at painting trees and bluebells'.
The 'revelation' for Martindale took place one day
in his study in the Philippines. He became fascinated
by the accidental effects created by a tube of burnt
sienna which had burst open when he accidentally dropped
something onto it. Rather than waste the paint, he spread
it randomly over a sheet of paper and left it to dry
in the hot sunlight streaming through the window. What
he saw when he looked at the paper some time later were
shapes and images which he describes as 'spirits in
the paper'. He had always liked to make faces and find
little images in the random patterns formed in diverse
materials and surfaces such as the walls of public toilets,
floor surfaces or folds in cloth. Fascinated and stimulated
by what his imagination was seeing in the smeared and
stained paper, he manipulated the image, allowing the
figures and images to present themselves to contemplation.
The figures or 'characters' he saw in the images also
began to be assigned specific roles within his imagination
- there was 'Tommy', the foot soldier from the First
World War who died in 1915; then there was 'Brick, a
strong, tough leader of men and also a pirate'. We also
have other images such as further scenes from the First
World War curiously intermixed with an image of King
Henry the Eighth.
At this early stage in his treatment for Parkinson's,
Martindale had been over-prescribed a medication which
began to have the effect of inducing strong hallucinatory
sensations and this, as he acknowledges, provided the
initial stimulus to the content of his work. He describes
this time as disturbing but not particularly frightening,
with the sensation of, for instance 'a person suddenly
growing fur' as he was talking to them, or being surrounded
by 'ghostly figures whispering to him'. He describes
his paintings as sometimes feeling like 'spirits' from
another dimension trying to communicate through him
with, at least in the earlier days, the sensation that
it was 'other hands' making the paintings. He later
began to acknowledge his own wilful involvement, however.
It is worth noting that Martindale confessed to growing
up in a 'haunted house' where he regularly would see
an 'old grey lady' whom he says on one occasion 'tried
to push him down some stairs', and that ghosts would
on occasion talk to him. He does still experience communication
with spirit presences that he does not describe as hallucinations
in the same way as experienced through medication. In
his study, he regularly experiences contact with spirit
presences whilst painting. He describes his study as
sited over the spot where the deceased were laid out
before burial and he feels the presence of the dead
influencing him - although no longer directly.
What is clear when talking to Martindale about his
paintings and his experiences is that we are being invited
into an imaginative world that is genuinely constructed
in response to disturbances brought about by changes
to his health and circumstances. It is an imagination
formed from a lucid mix of inner fantasy and an open
and receptive attitude towards the materials of painting
and the powerful influences that are perhaps beyond
rational interpretation, being all the more powerful
for that.