Rick Stevens’s career as an artist has evolved in much the same way his paintings do. He takes his inspiration from the natural world in all its sublime mystery, then surrenders to that mystery to let the unseen forces of nature guide his hand—and his life. This intuitive process creates room for those serendipitous moments that emerge only when the chattering of the conscious mind is stilled, allowing him to proceed with his life and work in an atmosphere of quiet joy and reverence.
It’s been that way ever since he was a small child growing up in Sparta, Michigan, when he used to watch his talented father as he painted evocative landscapes that reflected the beauty of woods, rivers, and wildlife. Inspired by that process, Stevens went on to study art at college, but his most intense education was provided by the woods themselves.
Shortly after graduation, he retreated to an isolated cabin in northern Michigan for a year to meditate and absorb the rhythms of the life forces that commingled within the forest. The move was precipitated by his association with a spiritual teacher from India, which brought about major changes in both his way of thinking and his lifestyle, including the cultivation of practices such as meditation and yoga. These disciplines complemented his study of compatible teachings from his own cultural heritage, such as that of the transcendentalists like Emerson and Thoreau, which provided a way of connecting to the spiritual aspects of nature. The existential questions raised in these studies also spurred his interest in quantum physics and other such scientific theories, along with a desire to explore these worlds through his art.
Stevens thus began as a landscape painter, but the ephemeral appeal of nature eventually led him away from the realistic rendering of what he saw around him and into a realm of abstraction, where pulsating energy and lambent light create the crescendos and diminuendos of a world in continuous flux. Working both in the studio and en plein air, he draws on the realism and abstractions of the natural world to create paintings that challenge us to perceive the underlying structure of the universe within a seemingly random expression of unalloyed beauty.
Recently his work has come full circle as he returns to his roots in recognizable landscapes for some of his expression. But all of his paintings, whether abstracted or representational, continue to merge the observable world with the unseen psychic energy beneath the surface that engages us the never-ending cosmic dance.
Rick Stevens' work has been exhibited extensively in solo and group exhibitions throughout the United States and internationally, including: Art International Zurich with NoonPowell, Zurich (2023); (AAF), London; Spring Fair (AAF), London (2023); Spring Collection, NoonPowell Gallery, London (2022); Sanctuary in Light, Santa Fe, NM (2022); Battersea Spring Fair AAF, London (2022/23); Hampstead Fair AAF, London, (2022/23); Featured Artist, Edgewood Orchard Gallery, Wisconsin (2021); Rick Stevens, Kay Contemporary Art, Santa Fe, NM (2021); Coors Western Art Exhibition, Denver, CO, (2021 & 2022); Rick Stevens Annual Solo Exhibition, Hunter Kirkland Gallery, Santa Fe, NM (2006 - present); Visual Variations: Figurative to Abstract, NoonPowell Gallery, Notting Hill, London (2020); Christmas Exhibition, NoonPowell Gallery, Notting Hill, London; Battersea Spring Fair AAF, London (2020). Retrospectives of his work have been presented at The Grand Rapids Art Museum, Grand Rapids, Michigan and Brauer Museum of Art, Valparaiso, Indiana. Muskegon Museum of Art, Michigan, mounted a solo exhibition of Stevens' work, Realms of Nature: Unfolding Patterns. Other recent solo exhibitions include, Breathing Light, Hunter Squared Gallery, Santa Fe, (2019); Dancing in Paradox, Hunter Kirkland Contemporary, Santa Fe, (2018); Loitering in Mystery, Hunter Kirkland Contemporary, Santa Fe, (2017); Invocations, Exhibit by Aberson, Tulsa, (2016); The Nature of What Arises, Canfin Gallery, Tarrytown, (2015); Wilderness Within, Hunter Kirkland Contemporary, Santa Fe, (2014); Domain Of Intangibles, Mark Gallery, Englewood, (2013).
Stevens' work is held in public, corporate and private collections throughout the United States and internationally, including; Burrell College of Osteopathic Medicine, Las Cruces, U.S.A; Almutiaq Group, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia; World Trade Center Hotel, Beijing China; Goldman Sachs, New York, U.S.A; Brauer Museum of Art, Valparaiso, U.S.A; and Muskegon Museum of Art, MGrand Valley State University, Michigan, U.S.A.