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Gage Taylor Gage Taylor (born 1942, died 2000) was a visionary artist known for his psychedelic-inspired landscapes. Art critic Thomas Albright wrote, "Taylor's landscape fantasies combined profuse detail with heavier, painterly surfaces and achieved a "naive" and nostalgic flavor, like the work of a visionary Grandma Moses."〔(''Art in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1945-1980: An Illustrated History'', Thomas Albright. University of California Press, 1985, page 178 )〕 == Career == Taylor's art has been exhibited at the Whitney Museum in New York; the Paris Biennalle; the Smithsonian; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; the National Museum of American Art; and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Some of Taylor's psychedelic works were printed as posters, including ''Mescaline Woods'' and ''The Road'', and ''Artweeks David Clark estimated that Taylor's reproductions (and those of his compeer Bill Martin), "are on millions of walls throughout the western world." Taylor created the album cover art for The New Riders of the Purple Sage's ''Brujo'', as well as Larry Coryell's ''Fairyland''. Of his own work, Taylor said, "I'm not outwardly political, but I consider my painting to be about the social revolution."〔(''Art in the San Francisco Bay Area, 1945-1980: An Illustrated History'', Thomas Albright. University of California Press, 1985, page 178 )〕 He resided in Woodacre, California.
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