bG Gallery is proud to present a solo exhibition by Los Angeles–based painter Gay Summer Rick, Stratus, on view from September 25 through October 26, 2025. The exhibition will feature a new body of atmospheric paintings that reflect on shifting environments, layered emotions, and the beauty found within moments of uncertainty.
STRATUS takes its title from the National Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) definition of “Stratus” clouds: broad, layered, diffuse forms that blanket the sky with soft cover. Each painting carries this sense of enveloping presence—an embrace of light, fog, and color that reveals the resilience and wonder embedded in Southern California’s shifting skies.
Rick’s work invites viewers to pause, breathe, and embrace the subtle transformations in the air around us. In her words, “There’s a chance of fog and clouds today, and it’s gorgeous.”
Gay Summer Rick biography:
Gay Summer Rick creates atmospheric scenes that reveal an unexpected beauty in commonplace elements within the urban coastal landscape. Sparsely populated, leaning toward abstraction, her paintings capture the energy and movement of the observable world, describing the quiet vibration of life where the city meets the sea. Guided by a deep commitment to sustainability, Rick employs innovative techniques to minimize her environmental impact. She applies pure oil paint using only palette knives and treats the paint architectonically, layering, carving, and accumulating it, but never discarding. In this way, she completely avoids toxic solvents and prevents material waste.
Originally from New York, Gay Summer Rick received a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree from the New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University, and a Master’s degree from the University of Puget Sound. Her work has been exhibited in museums and galleries across the US, Europe, and Japan. She is a member of Oil Painters of America, California Art Club, and Malibu Art Association. Her paintings have been featured in American Art Collector Magazine, HYPERALLERGIC, Huffington Post, ARTNOWLA, Artillery Magazine, Chronicle Luxembourg, Malibu Magazine, Malibu Times, and others, and in several books and exhibition catalogs. She is a Center for Creative Innovation grant recipient, a Getty grant recipient, and a Kipaipai Fellow. Rick’s art and practice are the subject of short documentary films including “Iconic LA and the Urban Coast”, and “Follow the Sun” sponsored by a grant from the Museum of Art and History, Lancaster, California. Her paintings are in corporate and private collections around the world.
A resident of Malibu for over 25 years, Rick normally maintains studios in Inglewood and Malibu. The Palisades Fire, which devastated a large swath of Malibu in January 2025 rendered her Malibu studio and home unusable. From this experience a new body of work emerged from her Inglewood studio that celebrates resilience in the face of uncertainty, embraces moments of joy, and describes an inexorable beauty that is life in Malibu.