In the 1940s, he traveled for five year in Europe, to Italy, France, Greece and Egypt, where he studied the works of Antoni Tàpies, Jean Dubuffet, Robert Motherwell, Louise Nevelson, Robert Rauschenberg and Mark Rothko .
Louise Nevelson, artist, emigrated from Russia to Rockland as a child
During the same year the exhibition traveled to the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, where they appeared with shows by Louise Nevelson and Andrew Wyeth as the first exhibits installed in the new museum.
Marie Louise, Duchess of Parma | Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll | Louise | Louise Slaughter | Tina Louise | Louise Simonson | Louise Nevelson | Louise Brooks | Louise Bourgeois | Princess Louise | Louise Redknapp | Mary-Louise Parker | Lake Louise | Mary Louise Wilson | Louise of Savoy | Louise Homer | Marie Louise | Louise Marie Adélaïde de Bourbon | Louise Lawler | Louise Fletcher | Louise Erdrich | Clara Louise Kellogg | Thelma & Louise | Princess Marie Louise of Schleswig-Holstein | Louise Rennison | Louise (opera) | Louise of Sweden | Louise Glück | Louise de Kérouaille, Duchess of Portsmouth | Louise Chamis |
The collection features painting, sculpture, video, photography, works on paper, and installation art that illuminate movements and trends from the 1960s to the present, by renowned artists such as Joan Mitchell, Andy Warhol, Bill Viola, Lynda Benglis, Kerry James Marshall, Callum Innes, Grace Hartigan, Larry Rivers, Louise Nevelson, Frank Fleming and Philip Guston, as well as works by a younger generation who are defining the new century.
Since the 1970s the museum has added works by modern artists, such as Jacob Lawrence, Louise Nevelson, Robert Motherwell, George Segal and Jim Dine.
In 1925, Eaton's stepmother, Edith Cox Eaton purchased the historic Palo Alto house of Juana Briones de Miranda and ran it as an art colony of sorts: artist Lucretia Van Horn and sculptor Louise Nevelson spent significant periods of time there, as did Marjorie.