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WAYNE PATE
at MAYA FRODEMAN GALLERY West -
Wayne Pate has built a visual language that elevates both objects of antiquity and of the everyday, creating quietly graphic still life works that are rich with art historical refences and playfully reconceive classical motifs. Pate's inspiration, from ancient Rome to the Japanese Edo period, to the Fauves and Cubists through pop art and beyond, stems from his longtime fascination with museums and his many travels. Throughout his careful weaving of styles and symbols, Pate's work maintains a distinctly modern mood.
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Iris Bulbs No. 83, 2023Oil stick and acrylic on paper32 1/4 x 22 1/2 inches
Framed dimensions 33 1/4 x 25 1/2 inches -
Harmony No. 8, 2023Oil stick and acrylic on paper15 x 11 1/2 inches
Framed dimensions 17 1/2 x 13 3/4 inches -
Harmony No. 9, 2023Oil stick and acrylic on paper15 x 11 1/2 inches
Framed dimensions 17 1/2 x 13 3/4 inches
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Harmony No. II, 2023Oil stick and acrylic on paper15 x 11 1/2 inches
Framed dimensions 17 1/2 x 13 3/4 inches -
Iris Bulb No. 68, 2023Oil stick an acrylic on paper18 3/4 x 18 3/4 inches
Framed dimensions 22 x 21 3/4 inchesSold -
Iris Bulbs No. 66, 2023Oil stick and acrylic on paper18 3/4 x 17 1/2 inches
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In his travels, Pate has amassed a collection of historical objects, which include lebrillos, jugs and water pitchers from Spain, ceramics and terra-cotta pieces from Italy and Greece as well as various vessels from Provence, which often recur throughout the work as repeating shapes. Through subtle shifts in size, format, and contrast, these repeating shapes emerge as Pate's own visual language. In his own words Pate likens his current practice to the feeling of "having been out to sea for a while and now I've come back to port." And Pate has surely taken much from his travels; in some works, you can see the suggestion of the distorted perspectives of Henri Matisse's interiors, with heavy brushstrokes that hark back to those of Milton Avery; in others, one cannot help but find the Cubist organization of space of Juan Gris, but with the swirl of an Ionic column, or impression of an abstracted floral. Other elements are more graphic, with print-like surfaces that recall Fernand Léger's still life paintings and the flattening of space or presentation of compelling objects seen in Ivon Hitchens' works. Pate's works are equally rich in texture and materiality, with impasto acrylic brushstrokes on Arches, French writing paper, or linen. Pate often uses pieces of canvas or linen to collage and create layers beneath the paint, creating a depth to his flattened spaces and graphic use of color.
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WAYNE PATE: at MAYA FRODEMAN GALLERY WEST
Past viewing_room