Cadence Series by Walter Price

Large painting with light blue background with bands of dark blue, light orange, deep orange, and maroon comprised of the artist's footsteps

Cadence Series

Large painting with light blue background with bands of dark blue, light orange, deep orange, and maroon comprised of the artist's footsteps

Evidence of progression, 2023
Acrylic and gesso on canvas
65.5 x 139.5 in. (166.4 x 354.3 cm.)
Commissioned by MOCA and The Brick
Private collection


Filed Under:

Walter Price

(b. 1989, Macon, Georgia; lives in New York)

Walter Price’s paintings are situated at the intersection of figuration and abstraction, often grappling with questions of identity and form. They combine poetic fragments of figures, collaged elements, and gestural abstraction with a masterful use of bright, bold color, pushing and pulling at narrative legibility and allegory. Born in Macon, Georgia, Price grew up in the South and served in the U.S. Navy for four years before entering art school on the GI Bill.

On the occasion of MONUMENTS, Price chose to make work in response to the figure of Matthew Fontaine Maury, an officer in the Confederate Navy. While Maury is widely considered the founder of modern oceanography, he advocated for the perpetuation and expansion of slavery in the American South and hoped to use advancements in sea navigation to optimize the transatlantic slave trade.

The Cadence series features chromatically rich expanses of seemingly underwater space. Price made these oceanic abstractions by walking across his canvases in paint-laden shoes. The footprints are repeated and layered, suggesting schools of fish or currents and watery flows. The footprint form in repetition also harkens to the widely circulated stowage plans of the Brooks, an English ship that brought enslaved Africans across the Atlantic Ocean. This transatlantic route, often referred to as the Middle Passage, saw an estimated 15 million Africans taken from their homelands and sold into slavery across the Americas. Captives were shackled together and forced into the hold of the ship with little room to move or fresh air.

Price nods to art-historical predecessors like Bruce Nauman’s Walking in an Exaggerated Manner Around the Perimeter of a Square (1968), foregrounding the studio as a site of artistic production. The mark of Price’s footprint, often displaying the treads of his shoes, is likewise the trace of the artist. One can easily imagine him pacing back and forth, building his compositions on the studio floor. Rather than deeply researching the minutiae of Maury’s life and legacy, Price drew inspiration from the power in unity over righteous anger. The title of the series further invites the viewer to reflect on collective movement, doubly a reference to military formations and the efforts of Black activists marching for civil rights and social justice.

Walter Price

Walter Price’s paintings and drawings tread the line between figuration and abstraction, creating interior worlds that hover on the brink of legibility. Born in Macon, Georgia, Price served in the U.S. Navy en route to art school, where he honed his own idiosyncratic pictorial language. His fluid compositions encompass dynamic fields of stray marks and quasi-legible motifs: a TV monitor, a sofa, brick walls, automobiles, small hats of uncertain origin, a character from The Wiz. Bodies tend to emerge, fragmented, from abstract backdrops rendered in vibrant greens, yellows, and oranges; unmoored landscapes hover above or beneath the picture plane. Darby English has remarked on Price’s “penchant for punchy color: weighted with value and density.” As English notes, this color “approaches in sheets or lands with a thud, it bewilders, and it is potent exactly because it talks more to the body and imagination than to the head.”

As much as Price’s canvases revel in vivid color, solo exhibitions at venues such as MoMA PS1 or the Walker Art Center have also demonstrated his abiding commitment to line, to draftsmanship. A painting like A breeze filled with determination wafted towards us (2018) is studded with sparse symbols suggestive of both personal and cultural experiences—a runner, a palm tree, a Georgia peach—their identities recognizable yet, as curator Ashley James suggests, “never fully comprehended.” Drawing is foundational to Price’s practice, an independent endeavor in which the artist plays even further with detail, his agile strokes of pencil and pastel contributing to a typology of figures and scenes both diverse and coherent.

Continuing in the tradition of artists such as Jacob Lawrence and Henry Taylor, Price creates imagery that is figurative and abstract, individual and collective. Racial and ideological binaries are overturned as well, decoupled from their mainstream signifiers; for English, Price moves toward “claiming and combining cultural differences an otherwise inclined artist would forfeit and separate.” Transgressing bounded ideas of representation, Price’s combinatory logic instead challenges the strictures of visual communication and cultural consciousness, the relationship between what we see and what we know. In the end, Price aims for something more visceral: art that, in his words, “feels funky.”

Walter Price lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. His work is now on view at LA MOCA in MONUMENTS, co-organized with The Brick, Los Angeles. Recent solo exhibitions include Greene Naftali, New York (2025; 2022; 2020); the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2024); Camden Art Centre, London (2021); Aspen Art Museum (2019); MoMA PS1, New York (2018); and Kölnischer Kunstverein, Cologne (2018). His work was included in the 2019 Whitney Biennial, and is in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; Tate, London; Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; High Museum of Art, Atlanta; Astrup Fearnley Museet, Oslo; Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris; Fondazione Sandretto Re Rebaudengo, Turin; Hessel Museum of Art, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York; Aïshti Foundation, Lebanon; and Rollins Museum of Art, Orlando, among others.

Large painting with orange background with bands of red, blue, green, and brown comprised of the artist's footsteps

Get home before sunset, 2023
Acrylic and gesso on canvas
66 x 131 in. (167.6 x 332.7 cm.)
Commissioned by MOCA and The Brick
Courtesy of the artist and Greene Naftali, New York

Large painting with swirling blue, orange, and yellow background With marks made of hte artist's footprints in black, brown, and rust.

Pond de Rivaaahh, 2023
Acrylic and gesso on canvas
65 x 130 in. (1675.1 x 330.2 cm.)
Commissioned by MOCA and The Brick
Courtesy of the artist and Greene Naftali, New York

Large painting with red background with bands of yellow, gold, red, and black comprised of the artist's footsteps

Stand strong in your struggle, 2023
Acrylic and gesso on canvas
88 x 131 in. (223.5 x 332.7 cm.)
Commissioned by MOCA and The Brick
Courtesy of the artist and Greene Naftali, New York

Large painting with green and blue background with bands of yellow, green, dark blue, and light blue comprised of the artist's footsteps.

Forward March, 2022
Acrylic and gesso on canvas
78 x 154.5 in. (198.1 x 392.4 cm.)
Commissioned by MOCA and The Brick
Pamela J. Joyner and Alfred J. Giuffrida Collection

Large painting with light blue background with bands of dark blue, light orange, deep orange, and maroon comprised of the artist's footsteps

Evidence of progression, 2023
Acrylic and gesso on canvas
65.5 x 139.5 in. (166.4 x 354.3 cm.)
Commissioned by MOCA and The Brick
Private collection

Large painting with swirling blue background with layers of the artist's footprints in light and dark orange, pink, white, and yellow.

Step so muhfuggin much, my feet hurt, 2022
Acrylic and gesso on canvas
66 x 138 in. (167.6 x 350.5 cm.)
Commissioned by MOCA and The Brick
Courtesy of the artist and Greene Naftali, New York

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