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Margaret Leiteritz

Margaret Leiteritz, (born 1907), was a German painter.

In the 1960s and early 1970s, Leiteritz produced her 'painted diagrams', which drew heavily from the scientific articles and books in her care (she was a professional Librarian before becoming a painter).

Many of her works were strongly influenced by chemical engineering, and especially the field's graphs which depicted physical properties of substances. Leiteritz's paintings typically reworked a mundane graph using large expanses of color and a bold abstract theme, into a dynamic painting. Other works are reminiscent of a Bunsen burner flame, or a DNA gel.

One of her most famous paintings, "Crossing at the Left Border" (1966; oil on linen) appeared on the cover of the catalogue for an art exhibition in Chicago in 1969. This painting is known to have been inspired by a specific graph appearing in an otherwise unremarkable paper of the American Institute of Chemical Engineering Journal.

Her work has much in common with that of Klee.

External link

http://www.infoverlag.de/leiteritz.htm

Last updated: 10-24-2004 05:10:45