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Featured Post

Slayer of Windmills meets the Devil at the Crossroads

Christopher Benson, whom I interviewed a couple of years ago, recently sent me a link to his Substack, Slayer of Windmills. His most recent post was an insightful review of a retrospective exhibition of drawings and paintings by Anthony Terenzio, an important Connecticut artist I was previously unfamiliar with. It’s a great read, and I highly recommend it. While exploring his Substack, one essay stood out to me: his December 2024 piece, The Devil at the Crossroads. In it, Benson offers a candid and deeply personal meditation on the tension between artistic integrity and commercial viability. His experience of being let go by a gallery is not framed as an act of betrayal but rather as an inevitable consequence of a system where the needs of the market often run counter to an artist’s pursuit of growth and depth. He acknowledges that galleries seek consistency—a recognizable, marketable brand that keeps collectors engaged and sales flowing. Yet, as an artist, he finds that the ...

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Recent Posts

Interview with Cathy Diamond

I'm pleased to present an interview with Cathy Diamond, an NYC-based painter whose abstract paintings have evolved from a long involvement in responding to nature. Her work offers a unique narrative that draws from the fluidity and interconnectedness of shapes and sensations found in nature. "The sounds of wind and birds have always utterly entranced me." Diamond shares in this interview, "Add to this the almost cellular feeling that the scene is ...

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Interview with Barbara Grossman

I am pleased to share this email interview with the painter Barbara Grossman. Last fall she gave me her delightful catalog, "Patterning Women", from her July 2023 show at the Bowery Gallery. I wanted to find out more about her background, process and thoughts about artmaking so I asked her for this interview. I would like to thank her for her thoughtful answers to my questions. Since the 1980's she has been making broadly painted artworks with a ...

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Interview with Laura Vahlberg

I’ve recently been intrigued by the quiet and thoughtful work of Laura Vahlberg, an observation-based painter from Roanoke, Virginia. Her landscapes, in particular, are remarkable examples of how light and atmosphere can transform the ordinary into the extraordinary. Vahlberg's broad paint handling summarizes the mundane particulars of her surroundings, close looking through a lens of formal abstraction engages her compressed limited palette with ...

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Interview with Marie Riccio

Last October, I had the pleasure of meeting Marie Riccio at her solo exhibition, Still Echoes, at The Painting Center and the Small Works Invitational at First Street Gallery. Riccio’s work drew my attention for the sophistication of her compositions and subtle yet powerful use of color as tone that brings an exceptional depth and nuance to her modern still-life setups of commonplace objects, transforming them into subjects of contemplation and ...

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Upcoming Events

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Reviews and Events

Jason Harvey: Peace Tree

Review by John Goodrich, guest contributor     Artists are seekers. Some search for insights into cultural habits and circumstances; often they end up finding something else — a deeper sense of their own social role. Other artists concentrate on faithfully drawing and painting the objects around them. They’re liable to eventually ...

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The Street at Gagosian

Review by Sutton Allen, guest contributor The Street at Gagosian, 980 Madison Ave. On view until December 18. There stands a eulogy uptown at 980 Madison Ave, between 76th and 77th Street. Gagosian is slated to permanently close the doors of its Madison Avenue location within the coming months, and The Street is an excellent send-off. ...

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At a Glance

  • Mariah ONeill

      A while ago on Facebook, I started seeing a large number of posts of stunning portraits, landscapes, and more by many lesser-known European artists from the early to mid 20th century. Many of these artists were unfamiliar but there was a common thread of originality, intensity, and poetic vision that captivated me and inspired me to find out more about these painters. But first, I wanted to find out about this Facebook poster, Mariah ONeill. Someone with such a good eye for great paintings must also be an interesting artist to check out. I wasn’t disappointed. I was enchanted by her many expressive portrait drawings which capture some remarkable aspect of the sitter’s personality, while simultaneously celebrating the transformation from marks on paper into something visceral and alive. I wrote to her hoping to learn more. She sent me a link to her Flickr page(see here www.flickr.com/photos/mariahoneill ) and stressed that she had little in the way of formal training and was largely self-taught, mainly by copying old masterworks by Rembrandt, Rubens, Caravaggio, etc. as well as spending much of her time growing up doodling. She said she did take some classes at her local art center and took one semester at PAFA but had to drop out due to needing to take care of her mother who was dying. Later, instead of art school, she went back to school to become a psychotherapist. She has had to struggle with serious chronic illness since 2005 and currently lives in the New England area. She attributes her involvement with an online drawing group, “Julia Kay’s Portrait Party” as being a big influence as there were a lot of excellent artists […]

  • Tracy Everly

    I ran across Tracy Everly’s paintings on Facebook recently and was struck by the warmth and joy in her work. The clarity of light and air and the freshness of work made me think that despite the devastation wrought by the Covid-19 pandemic, we can still be awe-struck by newly revealed beauty, like seeing distant Himalayan mountains for the first time after long being hidden by industrial smog.

  • Monica Bernier

    I love these delightful inventions by Monica Bernier that explore new possibilities for shape and sensuous color. I particularly enjoyed her whimsical series of Desert forms and the formal compositional investigations in her Collage cutouts seen in this slideshow.

Recent Posts

Interview with Bill Scott

I'm delighted to share this email interview with Bill Scott who writes from his home in Philadelphia. I’ve long been intrigued by Bill Scott's paintings and prints and was lucky to view an exhibition of his works last year at The Pierre Hotel in NYC. He was scheduled to have a solo show this April at his gallery, Hollis Taggart in Chelsea, NYC, NY. that was postponed due to the Covid-19 pandemic. His unapologetic celebrations of beauty, lyrical ...

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Stanley Lewis Interview, Part Two

I am very fortunate and grateful for the recent invitation by Stanley Lewis to visit his studio and home in Western Mass. and talk in person. Our conversation continued and helped to follow up on the second part of our interview which was recorded previously in our phone conversation. (Link to part one of this interview) When I arrived he showed me a large oil painting on canvas, a work in progress made over this past winter, on hold now till ...

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Great Reads

Interview with Gerry Bergstein

Gerry Bergstein is a well-known Boston painter and teacher who has hugely influenced many artists since the 1980s. I recently was viewing his work online and became re-enchanted by his astounding ...

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A Conversation With Frank Galuszka

Interview by Jeffrey Carr The artist Frank Galuszka lives and paints in a magical place, Santa Cruz, California. I first knew him when he was a very well-known and important member of the ...

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Interview with John McNamara

I'm delighted to share this interview, conducted by email, with the San Francisco-based painter John McNamara. There is much to see and think about his enigmatic subject matter, compositional ...

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Interview with Martha Armstrong

Martha Armstrong was in San Diego a few weeks ago and agreed to an interview with me. We met at a mutual friend’s home where we sat out on a hillside deck overlooking a huge valley with the distant ...

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Rules for Abstract Painting, BBC series

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg3oQ_OqQ_o

Videos

Euan Uglow Video

A video about the recent Euan Uglow exhibition: In 1974, Catherine Lampert organized the first major retrospective of Euan Uglow’s work for the Arts Council of Great Britain. Fifty years later, she curates another exhibition highlighting Uglow's pivotal pieces, marking the joint representation of his estate by Hazlitt Holland-Hibbert and Frankie ...

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Elizabeth Geiger’s, Borrowed Rhythms, at the Gross McCleaf

Elizabeth Geiger is currently having an exhibition this March of her latest paintings, Borrowed Rhythms, at the Gross McCleaf in Philadelphia. This John Thorton video interviews Geiger and gives us a look at that show and discusses her new direction of Cubist-inspired still-life. ...

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Robert Birmelin, John Thornton’s Video Interview and “Conversations with the Other” Exhibition

John Thornton interviews and discusses Robert Birmelin in his latest video, Robert Birmelin's Life in Art before his upcoming exhibition at the Stanek Gallery in Philadelphia (reception on Saturday, March 4) Robert Birmelin, who will turn 90 in November, is a major American artist known particularly for his paintings of New York City crowds. In ...

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Studio Visits

Interview with Deborah Kahn

This past summer I met Deborah Kahn in her home in Amherst, Mass. The walk to her studio through her house went past a huge collection of paintings by many stellar artists, all competing for my attention. Once inside her studio, I was additionally overstimulated by her enormous collection of art ...

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Stanley Lewis Interview, Part Two

I am very fortunate and grateful for the recent invitation by Stanley Lewis to visit his studio and home in Western Mass. and talk in person. Our conversation continued and helped to follow up on the second part of our interview which was recorded previously in our phone conversation. (Link to part ...

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A STUDIO VISIT WITH JANICE NOWINSKI

by Xico Greenwald An exhibition of recent paintings by Brooklyn-based artist Janice Nowinski will open this week at John Davis Gallery in Hudson, NY. The objects and figures in Ms. Nowinski’s paintings teeter and tilt. An active, funky geometry animates her canvases, with a warm, muted ...

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Interview with John Dubrow

John Dubrow in his studio Interview with John Dubrow by Xico Greenwald   John Dubrow has been making ambitious figurative paintings of New York City scenes since he moved to Brooklyn in the mid-1980s. His light-filled canvases are often years in the making—ragged, impastoed ...

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The Viewfinder

Wayne Art Center celebrates the nude figure with two exhibitions

The Wayne Art Center is having two exhibitions, The Nude, Mirror of Desire showing the work of Ben Kamihira, Paul DuSold, Margaret McCann, and Scott Noel as well as the juried exhibition The Nude Figure which displays 71 artists with 86 works selected out of 242 artists and with Scott Noel and Paul DuSold as the jurors. The Wayne Art Center press release states: The Nude, Mirror of Desire ...

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Interested in Writing for Painting Perceptions?

I wanted to put out a call for any painters who might be interested in writing critical essays, reviews, interviews, or op-ed pieces for Painting Perceptions. I'm particularly interested in writers who are knowledgeable with the many technical concerns of painting to write on a regular basis. This is a good way for painters who enjoy writing to reach a wider audience of fellow painters. ...

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Apollo and Dionysus in the Representational Painting Family Feud

by Elana Hagler This essay explores the subconscious impulses behind aesthetic choice and offers a framework for a deeper understanding of contemporary representational painting. It is written by a painter with a readership of painters in mind, but is appropriate for anyone who wants this specific peek into the creative psyche. “Apollo and Dionysus in the Representational Painting Family Feud” ...

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Thoughts on Varnishing

This is the first article for the new section on materials and technique, "Sounding Technical". The first thing I need to say is that I'm no expert about the technical aspects of painting. What I hope to offer is a non-partisan centralized source of knowledge and opinion to help in the learning and promotion of sound painting principles. Naturally there are many resources online to learn about ...

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Selected Articles

Interview with Dan Gustin

Interview with Zoey Frank

Interview with Barbara Kassel

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Popular Reads

INTERVIEWS:
Lennart Anderson
Gerry Bergstein
Robert Birmelin
Lois Dodd
Stanley Lewis (two parts)
A Frank Galuszka
Dan Gustin
Vincent Desiderio
Susannah Phillips
Ann Gale
Elizabeth Higgins
Diana Horowitz
Duane Keiser
Susan Jane Walp
Grant Drumheller
Caren Canier
Jane Culp
Lani Irwin
Alan Feltus
Langdon Quin
Julian Kreimer
Israel Hershberg
Yael Scalia
Michael Tompkins
Sigal Tsabari
Gillian Pederson-Krag
Stuart Shils
Harold Reddicliffe
Robert Dukes
Eric Aho
Kyle Staver
Alex Kanevsky
John Dubrow
ARTICLES AND REVIEWS
Memories of Philip Guston
Auden and Faulkner in the Work of Stanley Lewis
Ken Kewley, Writings on Color
Walter Tandy Murch
Gretna Campbell
Louis Finkelstien, On Painterly
VIDEO REVIEWS, MISC
“The Art of Gregory Gillespie: In Conversation, Simon Dinnerstein and Peggy Gillespie”
“Patrick George – A Likeness”
Morandi’s Dust
Lennart Anderson Slide Talk

Landscapes

  • Slayer of Windmills meets the Devil at the Crossroads
  • Review of Our Kids Play Together: A Show of Paintings by Elise Schweitzer and Laura Vahlberg
  • STANLEY LEWIS – TRADITION AND THE INDIVIDUAL TALENT
  • Interview with Cathy Diamond
  • Interview with Kathleen Dunn Jacobs

Still Life Painters

  • Review of “CONVERSATIONS: 23 Interviews with Still Life Artists” by Zeuxis
  • Interview with Marie Riccio
  • Interview with Paula Heisen
  • Interview with John Lee
  • Elizabeth Geiger’s, Borrowed Rhythms, at the Gross McCleaf

Figure Painters

  • Interview with Barbara Grossman
  • Interview with Bruce Lieberman
  • Interview with Tony Serio
  • A Conversation With Philip Geiger
  • Visible Influence: Janet Niewald and Wilbur Niewald

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More Selections from the Archive

Interview with Susannah Phillips

Susannah Phillips was raised in London and attended the Slade School of Fine Art in London. Her paintings have been in many solo and group exhibitions in London, New York and Provincetown, MA, and are included in numerous private collections. In 2014 and 2017, she was awarded the Josef and Anni Albers Foundation Residency. The artist lives and ...

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Conversation with Lois Dodd

Lois Dodd has been painting her everyday surroundings for sixty years. Her current exhibition, from February 26 through April 4, 2015 at the Alexandre Gallery in NYC shows twenty-four recent small-scaled paintings that depict familiar motifs such as gardens, houses, interiors and views from windows. Dodd, now eighty-seven, is an iconic figure of ...

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Interview with Ann Gale

by Larry Groff I am honored that Ann Gale agreed to this telephone interview and thank her greatly for being so generous with her time and attention with sharing thoughts about her art and process. Ann Gale is a leading American figurative painter living in Seattle. Her portraits were shown alongside other leading painters of the figure ...

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Painting Perceptions was started in 2009 by Larry Groff to promote the ideas, practice and experience of painters working from observation in a modernist vein from around the world through interviews, essays, videos and community. It later evolved to include imagination-based and abstract painting as well.More Info →

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