How Mary Weatherford Creates Her Poetic Canvases

The Los Angeles painter seems well on her way to long-overdue acclaim

Abstract painting with vibrant colors, including red, green, blue, and yellow, with a prominent pink horizontal line.
Mary Weatherford’s *City*, 2017, layers neon over fields of paint. Photo: Fredrik Nilsen, Courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles

In the land-inspired legacy of Southern California artists, the work of Ojai-born Los Angeles painter Mary Weatherford is a poetic ode to West Coast ecologies, including endless coastlines, rugged hillsides, and neon-illuminated streets. But rather than depict landscapes, her paintings abstract the factual details of a given moment—location, temperature, time of day—and distill them into their atmospheric qualities, producing swarms of overlapping colors of various opacity that retain the visibility of the artist’s brushstrokes.

Abstract painting with vibrant splashes of color and a bold red horizontal line across the canvas, displayed on a gallery wall.
Mary Weatherford’s City, 2017, layers neon over fields of paint. Fredrik Nilsen, Courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles

In the mid-1990s and through the aughts, Weatherford was embedding her canvases with natural flourishes, including actual seashells, sponges, and starfish. In her 2012 “Bakersfield” series, she began incorporating tubes of neon into her works, a decision that proved transformative.

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As evidenced in her first show with L.A. gallerist David Kordansky in 2014, these stripes of light stretched across diluted expanses of vinyl-based Flashe paint turned her linen canvases into electrified night skies. Striking another note, her 2014 Canyon featured the hazy, rosy undertones of sunset, with red and white neon evoking the endless streams of headlights and taillights that dominate aerial views of Southern California.

Art gallery interior with abstract paintings on the walls, featuring vibrant colors and diverse brushstrokes.
Mary Weatherford, like the land loves the sea, 2017, David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, CA, Installation view. Fredrik Nilsen, Courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles

Now decades into her career, Weatherford is expanding her practice. At her last Kordansky show, in 2017, her canvases had grown as large as 10 by 20 feet; her next solo exhibition will be at art powerhouse Gagosian. With her first career survey planned at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston in August 2019, Weatherford seems well on the way to long-overdue acclaim.

Abstract artwork with vibrant splashes of red, purple, and orange, featuring a vertical neon light at the center.
Mary Weatherford, phoenix, 2017. Fredrik Nilsen, Courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, CA

Abstract paintings with vibrant colors and neon light accents displayed on a gallery wall.
Mary Weatherford, Ice House Canyon series, 2017. Fredrik Nilsen, Courtesy of David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, CA

A version of this article first appeared in print in our 2018 Summer Issue under the headline Seeking Beauty. Subscribe to the magazine.