The earliest work in Pat Lay's impressive retrospective at Aljira : ceramic wall pieces describing urban topographies. Lay was based in Buffalo at the time. Aljira link (through March 19th) |
An Asian garden-inspired grid, which Marcia Tucker selected for the 1975 Whitney Biennial, just five years after Lay relocated to Manhattan. |
Detail of the Asian Garden grid floor work, recalling Jennifer Bartlett and Pat Steir's grids. |
Smaller garden works. |
Lay's interest in African and Asian culture was already clear. |
Ceramic. |
In the 1980s, Lay took a technical welding class and began working with wood and marble. |
She made totemic structures inspired by African sculpture, which also recall Louise Bourgeois |
A variety of shapes gathered together, presaging her later , figurative works inspired by African avatar-like forms that assemble objects from the person's life and gather them together. |
The quality of surface on these works is astounding. Ceramic on welded steel armatures. |
By this time, Lay had traveled frequently to China, Thailand and Indonesia. |
The front room at Aljira (exhibition moves from back to front, chronologically) with portrait heads and scrolls. |
Persian miniatures inspired Lay to break prescribed formats... |
Setting up boundaries then breaking them. These recent works are digital prints. |
Lay has been working with digital print on Kozo paper, which thin, absorbent surface allows the color to saturate. |
The prints on Kozo are mounted, with hand-painted strips of metallic paint or gold leaf, on Tyvek. |
The artist Pat Lay. |
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