Other artists associated with the movement are Lita Albuquerque,[6] Roz Stroll, Ron Cooper, Mary Corse, Fred Eversley,[7] John McCracken, Bruce Nauman, Maria Nordman, Eric Orr, Helen Pashgian, Joe Ray, James Turrell, DeWain Valentine, Doug Wheeler and Elyn Zimmerman.
A famous group of abstract color theory artists were influenced by the Light and Space Movement, notably:Frederick Spratt,[10] Phil Sims, Anne Appleby, and David Simpson.
The legacy of the Light and Space movement can be seen in the work of important contemporary artists, such as Casper Brindle, Olafur Eliasson, Brigitte Kowanz, Ann Veronica Janssens, Jennifer Steinkamp, Kaloust Guedel, [11]Phillip K. Smith III, Nellie King Solomon, Gisela Colon[12][13] and Shana Mabari.
[14] Irwin and Turrell, for instance, investigated the phenomenon of sensory deprivation (which influenced the development of their similarly spare light works) as part of the art-and-technology program initiated by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1967.
[24] In 2010, David Zwirner Gallery, New York presented an historic exhibition titled “Primary Atmospheres,” a term coined by art critic Dave Hickey to describe the contributions of Southern California artists to the Light & Space movement.