Born in Los Angeles, California (b. 1992)

Lauren Quin

Fly’s Eye, 2021

Oil on canvas
© Lauren Quin; courtesy the artist, Blum & Poe, and Friends Indeed Gallery. Photo by Ian Reeves.

Since 2011, Katz has been making paintings of roosters that she refers to as “cock paintings,” relishing the discomfort of the term. As she has acknowledged, these works reference the male ego: “The paintings are about masculinity, and about trying to work out the iconography of power, and the attraction to it.” The Other Side depicts a rooster in motion through a series of overlapping silhouettes, speed- ing from left to right in a way that recalls Eadweard Muybridge’s nineteenth-century photographic studies of moving forms. In each of the “cock paintings,” Katz sprinkles grains of rice onto the canvas and paints over them, creating an impasto texture that reinforces the works’ materiality in the face of painterly illusion. The title and imagery of The Other Side draw on the timeless antihumor of the road-crossing chicken.

Lauren Quin. Photo by Stephanie Noritz.

“You can span time inside a painting because when you look at it, you don't read it left to right; you start to enter, circle, and travel. It takes a long time for a painting to unfold. I want a viewer to be able to see every layer at once. Each layer is a chance for me to erase it.”

—Lauren Quin