Max Cole: Pale Horse

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Max Cole: Pale Horse September 5-28, 2025

Max Cole

The work of Max Cole feels elemental. Like the clean white bone of a deer found on a trail, a few chips of ancient mosaic uncovered buried beneath a street, or the crystalline crust of salt on the shore of a drying lake, these paintings seem composed of the essentials, of what is left behind when all noise and complication is stripped away.

Pale Horse presents a selection of Max Cole’s work from over the course of her career as an artist, with paintings from the seventies through the twenty-teens. While Cole had begun exhibiting her work earlier, it was in the early to mid-seventies that she began working with raw canvas in earnest, and as she says, “realized that I needed to stop exhibiting completely and shut myself in the studio away from all distractions so I could define my direction, which I did for about two years.” Cole emerged from this time with a direction that she has carried forward for five decades, continuing, as she puts it, her artistic “search of unknown territory.”

This new direction also led to success. A show at a gallery in Los Angeles in 1976 led to an important and formative group exhibition at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art called New Abstract Painting. From there Cole found representation in Manhattan and created a studio in New York City. During the next decades she also showed her work in Europe and even lived and had a studio there for a period. Eventually, however, she felt the pull to return to the States, and, after a few side-journeys (including a residency in Roswell, where the title piece, Pale Horse II, was created), Cole returned permanently to the southwest, not far from her native Oklahoma panhandle. No matter where Cole roamed, however, her work continued to chase the spare and ascetic spiritual explorations she began all those decades before.

So this is how Cole has always worked – with essentials. Her art is pared down to the barest foundations of visual language. Her palette is primarily black and white, with shades of gray and neutral tans or raw canvas sometimes coming through. Color, with its emotional freight, has never interested her. And her canvases are spare – primarily composed of lines and minimal geometrical forms. The most characteristic element of her painting is the fine and precise making of tiny marks across her canvases, layers upon layers of razor-thin lines. In the micro view these lines are like small stitches, or even the most elemental rudiments of human language (a vertical mark, counting one). In the macro view one sees this accumulation of marks build, weave, aggregate, and flow across the canvas, forming larger tonal patterns of horizontal bands.

This restriction to such strict and minimal parameters might, in the abstract, suggest that these works will be severe, reductive, or simplistic. Instead, they illustrate the seemingly paradoxical experience of infinite expression, variety, and spaciousness that can be found within rigorous strictures. The handdrawn, imperfect quality of Cole’s lines serve to infuse each painting with the breathing reality of the artist as present within the work. Her experience, her effort, her energy are recorded here on canvas – and there is a unique vibration and energetic quality that suffuses the work.

Black, white. Mark, canvas. Space. Light and shadow. These are the essentials of a practice of painting that has been honed over decades of careful, deliberate work. Cole’s art arises from a place of deep quiet, the patient journey of an artist toward expression that transcends the personal. If you wait, if you look, you might just catch a glimpse of those shimmering essentials that lie just on the other side of ordinary sight.

Michaela Kahn, PhD

Traverse, 2008, acrylic on linen, 68 x 80 inches
Silverstone, 2004, acrylic on linen, 68 x 80 inches
Aerie, 2004, acrylic on linen, 68 x 80 inches
Crystal Lake II, 1997, acrylic on linen, 52 x 62 inches
Strand, 1999, acrylic on linen, 52 x 62 inches
Pale Horse II, 1995, acrylic on linen, 68 x 80 inches
Taj, 1999, acrylic on linen, 30 x 36 inches
Wisp, 2002, acrylic on linen, 24 x 30 inches
Dutch Harbor, 2001, acrylic on linen, 52 x 62 inches

Traverse, 2008

acrylic on linen 68 x 80 in.

MAXC184

Click to inquire about this work

Silverstone, 2004

acrylic on linen

68 x 80 in.

MAXC201

Click to inquire about this work

Aerie, 2004

acrylic on linen 68 x 80 in.

MAXC198

Click to inquire about this work

Crystal Lake II, 1998

acrylic on linen 52 x 62 in.

MAXC222

Click to inquire about this work

Strand, 1999

acrylic on linen 52 x 62 in.

MAXC216

Click to inquire about this work

$175,000

Pale Horse II, 1995

acrylic on linen 68 x 80 in.

MAXC207

Click to inquire about this work

$175,000

Taj, 1999

acrylic on linen 30 x 36 in.

MAXC168

Click to inquire about this work

$175,000

$175,000

Wisp, 2002

acrylic on linen 24 x 30 in.

MAXC243

Click to inquire about this work

$48,000

$95,000

Dutch Harbor, 2001

acrylic on linen 52 x 62 in.

MAXC197

Click to inquire about this work

$40,000

$95,000

$95,000

Born: 1937 in Kansas

Lives and works in Northern New Mexico

Education:

1964 MFA, University of Arizona, Tucson 1961

1961 BA, Fort Hays State University, Hays, Kansas

Honors and Grants:

2009 Contemporary Artist’s Meeting with the Pope, Sistine Chapel, Vatican City, Italy

2005 Artist in Residence, The Joseph and Anni Albers Foundation, Connecticut

1995 Artist in Residence, The Roswell Museum and Art Center, Roswell, NM

1988 Research Fellowship, Indo-US Sub-Commission, U. S. Department of State for exhibition at the National Gallery of Fine Art, New Delhi and travel and study India

1987 Adolph Gottlieb Foundation Artist’s Grant

1986 Pollack/Krasner Foundation Artist’s Grant

1983 Visual Artists Fellowship, National Endowment for the Arts

1962-64 Fellowship for Graduate Study of Painting, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ

Selected Recent Solo Exhibition:

2025 Pale Horse, Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, Santa Fe, NM

2024 Jacob’s Ladder, Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, Santa Fe, NM

2023 Breaking Day, Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, Santa Fe, NM

2022 Endless Journey, SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe, NM

2021 The Bounding Circle, Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, Santa Fe, NM

2018 Crosswinds, Larry Becker Fine Art, Philadelphia, PA

The Long View, Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, Santa Fe, NM

2015 Black Magic, Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, Santa Fe, NM

2013 Meditations, Kunstation, Sankt Peter Koeln, Germany. Catalog. In collaboration with Kolumba.

Show Cover Hide: Schrein, The Esthetics of the Invisible, Kolumba Erzbischofliches Diozesanmuseum, Cologne, Germany. Catalog

Salt Marsh, Pampas, Dog Star and Fourteen Drawings, Larry Becker Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, PA

2012 Beyond the Fourth Dimension, kunstgaleriebonn. Accompanied by a book of twenty drawings and handwritten observations on the nature of art. Published by Verlag Weidle

Beyond, Charlotte Jackson Fine Arts, Santa Fe, New Mexico

To the Line, Meis van der Rohe Haus, Berlin. Catalog

At the Edge of Meaning, Galerie Wenger, Zurich. Brochure with writing by Stephen Zaima

2011 Drawings, Galerie Lindner, Vienna, Austria

Quintessence: Max Cole over Time, kunstgaleriebonn, catalog

Terre Firma, Max Cole: New Paintings, Haines Gallery, San Francisco, California

Max Cole, Paintings, Galerie Lindner, Vienna, Austria.

2010 Light and Line, New Paintings, Larry Becker Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, PA

Paintings, Galerie Schlegl, Zurich, Switzerland. (with Jens Trimpin)

Selected Museum and Public Collections:

The Achenbach Foundation, Fine Arts Museums, San Francisco, CA

Albright-Knox Museum, Buffalo, New York

The American Center, New Delhi, India

Berkeley Art Museum, Berkley, California

Chiat Foundation Collection, New York, New York

Collection Hanny Frick, Schaan, Lichtenstein

Daimler Collection, Berlin, Germany

Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, Texas

Denver Museum of Art, Denver, Colorado

Everson Museum, Syracuse, New York

FAI –Fondo per l’Ambiente Italiano, Villa Menafoglio, Varase, Italy

Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, San Francisco, California

Grunwald Center for Graphic Art, UCLA, Los Angeles, California

KiCo Foundation, Bonn, Germany

Kolumba Diozesanmuseum, Cologne, Germany

Kunstraum Alexander Buerkle Collection, Freiburg, Germany

Kreditanstalt fur Wiederaufbau, Frankfurt, Germany

La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, La Jolla, California

Lenbach Haus, Munich, Germany

Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California

Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark

Metropolitan Museum of Art, Graphics Department, New York, New York

Microsoft Collection, Seattle, Washington

Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis, Minnesota

Mondstudio Collection, Germany

Muse’ed’art et d’histoire Neuchatel, Switzerland

Museo d’Aarte Moderna Contemporanea di Trento e Rovereto, Italy

Museum der Schoenen Kunst, Szepmuveszeti

Muzeum, Budapest, Hungary

Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California

Museum of Fine Arts of New Mexico, Santa Fe, New Mexico

Museum of Modern Art, Graphics Department, New York, New York

Museum Geganstandfrierkunst, Landkreise Cuxhaven, Otterndorf, Germany

Museum fur Konkrete Kunst, Ingolstadt, Germany

Newport Harbor Art Museum, Newport Beach, California

The Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art, Roswell, New Mexico

The Panza di Biumo Collection, Varese, Italy

Rossi/Matttioli Collection, Milan, Italy

Samlung Alison and Peter W. Klein, Eberdingen-Nussdorf, Germany

Samlung Rosskoph, Kunstraum Alexander Buerkle, Freiburg, Germany

San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art, La Jolla, California

Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, California

Stadische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich, Germany

Staadliche Museen zu Berlin, Kupferstichkabinett, Berlin, Germany

Tel Aviv Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel

Tia Collection, Santa Fe, NM

The University of Arizona Museum of Art, Tucson, Arizona

Utah Museum of Art, Salt Lake City, Utah

Van Der Heyht Museum, Wuppertal, Germany

Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensborough, North Carolina

Museum of Fine Art, Budapest, Hungary

Vatican Museums Contemporary Art Collection

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