A pioneer of Texas Modernism, Toni LaSelle was one of the first Texas painters to commit fully to Abstraction. Her paintings have a vibrant force and compositional confidence that are exceptional, as demonstrated in Puritan.
LaSelle's work of the 1940s offers an important example of Texas Modernism. Influenced by her studies with Abstract Expressionist Hans Hofmann, she brought a painterly sophistication to her elemental, typically small-scale abstractions. LaSelle painted Puritan over her extended summer visits to Provincetown, the Cape Cod artists' colony where Hofmann's workshop was located. As the title suggests, the composition has a stringent and pared-down purity. The bold, saturated forms, both angular and rounded, are pitted against each other, their cool balance reflecting the rhythms of nature.