Leonard Daley (born ca. 1930s- died 2006 in the parish of St. Catherine, Jamaica) is the trickster mystic of the Jamaican self-taught artists (called the Intuitives in Jamaica). Rastafarian by inclination and experience, his work, at once naked and revealing nothing, is some of the most complex in Jamaica.
I think of Daley’s paintings in the same frame of reference as Dub music, once restricted to reggae in Jamaica, now globally used from reggae to jazz. The basis of this music, begun in Lee Perry’s Black Ark music studio, is the removal of the narrative melody line to reveal the intricate interplay of the percussion, bass, and rhythm guitar. Effects are added by the dubbing DJ or producer consisting often of echo, repetition, fadeouts and ins, and deep reverb. Another important dub technique is the sudden removal of elements to create aural holes and spaces in the fabric and weave of the music. Often samples of sounds and other music are collaged in as well. In Jamaica, dub reggae picks up many layers of meaning when the rhythms have Revival or Rastafarian resonances.