PHILADELPHIA, PA.- Locks Gallery is presenting Snow and Waterfall, an exhibition of works from Pat Steirs acclaimed Waterfall series and related works. This marks the artists seventh solo show with the gallery and is accompanied by a catalog featuring essays by Carter Ratcliff and Lynne Tillman. Spanning over four decades of her career, this exhibition will occupy the first and second floors of the gallery.
Pat Steir is a leading figure in contemporary painting, known for her inventive process and lyrical use of scale and color. Steirs mature process was developed in the 1980s with her Waterfall paintings, by way of her associations with Conceptual Art, Minimalism and a close study of Eastern painting. Through rigorous and wide-ranging material experimentations, Steir has continued to push the conceptual bounds of painting. In the mid-2000s, she created her Split paintings, which are indebted to, but also slyly subvert the hard-edged, color field abstractions of her predecessors Barnett Newman and Ellsworth Kelly. A selection of these works, which explore the characteristics of pigments and fluidity, and showcase her continued mastery of the chemistry of oil paints, will be on view on the second floor of the gallery.
For nearly half a century, Steir has been exploring water both as literal material representations and through their poetic possibilities. This selection of works spans the beginning of her Waterfall series in the 1980s, to her present-day explorations of this motif. Immersive large-scale paintings like Graphical Waterfall (1990) are accompanied by more intimate works such as Lovely Red (2000) and Simones Snow (2001). The deep, receding space of Paris Waterfall (1990) is abruptly flattened by a syncopated, surface-level rhythm. Like the classical Chinese literati paintings that inspired the Waterfall series, these works are not simply reflections of physical landscapes, but an expression of the artists inner world and commitment to process.
Even though her body of work is grounded in the history of art, aesthetics and Eastern philosophies, Steirs studio practice is essentially focused on the pure pleasure of material. She pours, splashes, flings and throws paint onto vertically hung un-stretched canvases, embracing non-intention as a conceptual backbone for her work. Broad, veiled swathes of paint are applied and then left to drip, with gravity and the inherent fluidity of the medium taking over where Steirs gestures end. The resulting landscapes carve out a contemplative space, appealing to the immediacy of the senses, as in the lush, spare Forest in Snow (2010) and the riotous air of Snowflake (1995). The paradoxes between restraint and disorder, intention and chance, illusion and event, are a vital force in Steirs work. While her work has been a landmark in contemporary painting since the 1980s, this present collection takes on a fresh perspective. As water becomes an increasingly vulnerable resource, Steirs continued exploration of these themes commands another collective resource under threat our embodied, uninterrupted attention.