"In a New Light"
Ron Cooper
STERN LOUIS FINE ARTS
9002 Melrose Avenue West Hollywood, CA 90069
Phone: 310-276-0147 Fax: 310-276-7740 e-mail:



March 6 > May 15, 2021
As a member of the Southern California Light and Space Movement, Cooper (b. 1943) has long
been a pioneer in the development of techniques and use of materials designed to capture,
manipulate, and alter the viewer’s perception of light. His early Light Trap works are formed
from many layers of polyester resin and fiberglass, sprayed onto and later released from a
waxed glass mold. Light pouring into these constructions is made substantial by the refraction
between the layers, transforming the captured light into both medium and canvas. This process
of creating these works is, in the words of the artist, “the closest thing to painting on air.”
Cooper’s Corona Bars revisit his earlier Vertical Bar series and are the product of a long stretch
of uninterrupted time during lockdown, which offered the artist an opportunity to experiment with
new materials and surface finishes. The first Vertical Bars were made in 1965 and executed with
natural lacquer and pigments derived from pearly Swedish fish scales; the Corona Bar works on
display play with the dizzying spectrum of synthetic pigments on the market today. Suspended in
a transparent acrylic medium, the pigments are sprayed in layers onto the faces of slim
rectangular boxes made of transparent plexiglass. Light slices cleanly through the plexiglass and
splinters in all directions when it meets the layers of suspended particles, creating riots of
opalescent color that morph, blend, disappear and reappear as the viewer moves around the
work.
As the day advances and the light evolves, the opacity of the Corona Bars waxes and wanes:
crystalline in the morning, diaphanous in the afternoon, sharp and solidified in the evening.
Cooper has added an additional dimension by encouraging a variety of textures to form on the
surfaces. Whether softly gritted, bubbly, or pebbled like raindrops on dry soil, these surfaces also
transform as the viewer’s shifting perspective causes light to pool, reflect, or glide straight through
the shallow ridges and dips. Never the same day-to-day or even instant-to-instant, each work
contains infinite singular experiences, a continuum of kaleidoscopic moments in space and time.
Educated at Chouinard Art Institute, Ron Cooper has exhibited in numerous solo and group
exhibitions since the late 1960s. Works by Cooper are included in the permanent collections of
the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Art Institute of Chicago; the Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, New York; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among numerous
other public and private collections in the United States and abroad. In addition to his art practice,
Cooper is known for popularizing craft mezcal in the United States through his highly successful
brand, Del Maguey. Cooper lives and works in Ranchos de Taos, New Mexico and Oaxaca,
Mexico. Ron Cooper
mpefm
USA art press release