Artists’ studios aren’t generally thought of as meditative places. The stereotype is one of disarray—an image comes to mind of paintbrushes, sculpting tools, or other instruments of the trade strewn about a room, as if to signal an unruly creative process.

But the studios of certain mid-20th-century Los Angeles artists were actually quite Zen. After World War II, California, with its history of tolerating unorthodox belief systems, was especially open to the influence of Zen Buddhism, in which meditation plays an important role. As Buddhism moved into the mainstream, L.A. painters and ceramicists found in it a wealth of ideas for their art.

#8 / John McLaughlin

#8, John McLaughlin, 1966. Oil on canvas. 48 x 60 in. The Marilynn and Carl Thoma Collection, Chicago. Image courtesy of Greenberg Van Doren Gallery, New York

Painter John McLaughlin, for instance, took a decidedly Buddhist approach to his work: he strove to take himself out of the picture. He was known to quote a 15th-century Zen painter’s principle of ma, the “marvelous void.” Ma—a spatial emptiness that provides an essential focal point between two objects or subjects—is evident in his painting shown above, which consists of two black horizontal lines bordering the edge of an open white field.

The more abstract and neutral the picture, McLaughlin believed, the more he could intensify the viewer’s “natural desire for contemplation without benefit of a guiding principle.”

Zen also exerted an influence on the ceramics studio of the Otis Art Institute, directed by Peter Voulkos. At one point, the head of the Otis design department kidded Voulkos about all the books on Zen lying around, joking that the “whole shop was going Zen.” The next day, labels had blossomed on every object: “Zen” water faucets, “Zen” chairs, “Zen” clay.

Little Big Horn / Peter Voulkos

Little Big Horn, 1959, Peter Voulkos. Polychromed stoneware. 62 x 40 x 40 in. The Oakland Museum of California, gift of the Art Guild in memory of Helen Schilling Stelzner. © Mrs. Ann Voulkos, Voulkos Family Trust. Image courtesy of the Voulkos & Co. Catalogue Project. Photo by Joe Schopplein

Voulkos’s teaching philosophy was informed by his admiration for mingei, the Japanese folkcraft movement that merged artisanal traditions with cultural traditions of Zen Buddhism. Visually, Voulkos’s muscular action ceramics have little in common with McLaughlin’s marvelous voids; instead, Zen and his work are linked by an affinity for the meditative aspects of Buddhist practice. (You can see Voulkos’s energetic working method in this video.)

The asymmetric, abstract, and innovative paintings and ceramics created by Voulkos, McLaughlin, and other Zen-inspired artists—several of which are on view in the exhibition Pacific Standard Time: Crosscurrents in L.A. Painting and Sculpture, 1950–1970—are worth contemplating.

Adapted from a sidebar written by the Getty Research Institute’s Pacific Standard Time curatorial associate Catherine Taft. Read more about “Zen in the Studio” in the new book Pacific Standard Time: Los Angeles Art, 1945–1980.