She exhibited at the 1984 Venice Biennale. Her solo exhibitions include: Brooke Alexander Gallery (1989) The Texas Gallery in Houston (1987); Gallery Inge Baker in Cologne, Germany (1983) and others.[3] She had solo exhibitions at Boston’s Institute of Contemporary Art, Wisconsin’s Madison Art Center, and Baltimore’s Contemporary Museum. Her work was featured in group exhibitions at the New Museum, the Whitney Museum, the Rhode Island School of Design’s Museum of Art, SFMoMA, LACMA and the Brooklyn Museum.
Louisa Chase is known for her use of schematically drawn body parts (i.e. hands, feet, torsos) and elements of landscape, separately or combined.[4] She used a bright color palette and geometric forms.[4] Chase paid special attention to the brushstrokes and markings in wood in her pieces.[12] Chase’s work shows influence from New Image Painting and Neo-Expressionism.[4]
Chase’s paintings often have a sense of juxtaposition between disturbing imagery and lightness or even humor of style. “When peopled, her fragments of place are inhabited by partial figures: torsos, hands, feet. They are hovering or falling or drowning or being assumed into the sky.”[12] This imagery is contrasted by the cartoonish style with which Chase would symbolize these body parts, the many energetic brushstrokes and the bold colors she would use.[12]Swimmer, in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art, is an example of Chase's use of cartoonish human bodies and body parts rendered in geometric shapes.
1979 Chase's work "Tears, Ocean II" part of Painting: The Eighties at NYU[4]
1985 New Currents: Louisa Chase. Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston[13]
1996 Madison Art Center
2008 Goya Contemporary & Goya–Girl Press in Baltimore, Maryland [14]
Works and publications
Chase, Louisa (1982). Louisa Chase. New York, N.Y.: Robert Miller Gallery.
Chase, Louisa; Salcman, Michael (2003). Louisa Chase : New Paintings. Baltimore, Md.: Contemporary Museum.
Amenoff, Gregory; Tallman, Susan (1989). Contemporary Woodblock Prints: Gregory Amenoff, Richard Bosman, Louisa Chase ... Jersey City, N.J.: Jersey City Museum.
Arlen, Nancy; Heintz, Rudy; Chase, Louisa (1980). New Work/New York. New York, N.Y.: New Museum.
^ abcHeller, Jules; Nancy G. Heller (2013). "Chase, Louisa L. (1951 - )". North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge. pp. 121–122. ISBN978-1-135-63882-5.
^ abcField, Fine, Richard S., Ruth (1987). A Graphic Muse: Prints by Contemporary American Women. New York: Hudson Hills.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)