By the mid-’50s, Julius Wasserstein already had spent three years at CSFA (now the San Francisco Art Institute), and he was studying at San Francisco State University building a reputation as an action painter. He was, along with Remington, who shared his interest in action techniques, one of the three artists who showed at both the Ubu and the “6″ Galleries. Much of Wasserstein’s work in the early ’50s employs big, fuzzy forms in which paint is often exploited as a material capable of a whole range of characteristics and techniques. He returned to the San Francisco Art Institute to teach, from 1960 to 1963, and during that time received the San Francisco Art Association Nellie Sullivan Award (1961). Later, in the ’60s and ’70s, Wasserstein’s style changed, as small, vivid forms were set against larger areas of dark, even color. “His paintings of the 1960s and 1970s became more spare, concentrating on small, irregular areas or expansive ribbons of vivid, marbled colors against grounds of flat, darker colors”.
Maquette Exhibition
John Natsoulas Center for the Arts
Evenings at the gallery
1st & 3rd Thursdays --- 8pm-10pmFree poetry night and open mic MC'd by Dr. Andy Jones
Information on the Poetry Night Reading Series
3rd Fridays--7:30pmSpoken Word + Jazz Beat
Spoken Word / Jazz-Beat event details
2nd Fridays-- 7pm-10pmOpening Reception + 2nd Friday Art About
Gallery Cafe

Visit the Gallery Cafe!
GranCrema Italian Coffee and an assortment of coffee drinks! The gallery cafe is a great first stop before exploring the four floors of art at the John Natsoulas Center for the Arts.
About the John Natsoulas Gallery…
“No gallery in California does more for the arts than the John Natsoulas Gallery.”
Dana Gioia
Poet and past President of the NEA“Visitors from out of state might never expect to find one of Northern California’s most ambitious galleries in the university town of Davis . . . But for some years art dealer John Natsoulas has been staging significant shows devoted to less-studied aspects of West Coast art and documenting them with well-made catalogues.”
(ARTnews )“Those for whom the San Francisco Beat phenomenon is merely the stuff of legend can get a taste of the real thing in an all-day conference sponsored by the John Natsoulas Gallery in Davis.”
-Kenneth Baker, San Francisco Chronicle"After an unfettered conference in Davis draws attention to West Coast practitioners, a Getty Institute Panel will look at L.A.'s role"”
Scott Timberg
Los Angeles Times““I don’t know of anyone else who is doing this level of interdisciplinary collaboration between the visual, musical and literary arts. It’s the great work.”
-Joyce Jenkins, Poetry Flash

