Larry Poons
Louise 1978
Acrylic on Canvas
80.5 x 36 in

Provenance

Acquired directly from the artist, New York, c. 1980

Private collection, Victoria

In the late 1970s, American artist Larry Poons underwent a dramatic transformation in his painting practice, producing some of the most visceral and physically charged works of his career. Departing fully from the crisp geometry and optical clarity of his earlier work, Poons embraced a raw, gestural abstraction rooted in process and materiality. His canvases from this period are characterized by thick layers of paint, drips, splashes, and accumulations of pigment. Working in large scale, often on unstretched canvas, Poons allowed gravity and physical movement to shape the final image, creating works that feel less like static compositions and more like records of an intense, performative encounter with paint. These late ’70s paintings marked a bold rejection of formalist constraints and affirmed Poons’ place as a fiercely independent force in American abstraction, committed to the expressive and transformative possibilities of the medium.