Part of the first generation of feminist artists to gain prominence, she is noted for her sculptures which depict ordinary objects, such as ball gowns crafted from dried acrylic paint, created from unusual materials.
[2] A 1988 bronze sculpture by Lasch, Self-Portrait: Renaissance Woman and Her Lover, is owned by the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
[5] The latter museum also once owned a wedding cake sculpture commissioned in 1979 by Kynaston McShine for its fiftieth anniversary, but this was discarded sometime due to irreversible deterioration of its components in the 1990s, a fact which was not disclosed to the artist until 2016.
[6][2] Journeys of the Heart, exhibited at the Palm Springs Museum in California, surveyed 43 years of work by Pat Lasch.
It featured delicate cake and pastry sculptures made from dried acrylic paint and a video of the artist at work.