With their thick applications of paint and distinct, layered brushstrokes, American artist Hernan Bas’ sensual portraits and landscapes are inspired by literature, sexuality, old-world romanticism and the supernatural.
In 2026, Bas presents The Visitors at Ca’ Pesaro – International Gallery of Modern Art in Venice, curated by Elisabetta Barisoni. The exhibition presents more than 30 new paintings in an immersive installation conceived specially for the site.
Bas grew up in Florida and was struck by the superficial obsession with idealised male bodies in Miami in the 1980s and 1990s. He graduated from the New World School of Arts in Miami in 1996 and later left Cooper Union after one semester. Addressing Miami’s vanity, Bas made early paintings featuring the diet drink SlimFast. In Slim Fast Silhouette (1999–2000), a thin young man sits with a finger outstretched, his body rendered in splotchy browns. The series’ inclusion in a landmark exhibition titled Making Art in Miami: Travels in Hyperreality (2000) at the Museum of Contemporary Art in North Miami launched Bas’ career.
Male beauty is paramount to Bas’s figurative paintings. Stirred by the romance and sentimentalism of 19th-century writers like Oscar Wilde and Joris-Karl Huysmans, Bas’ work is particularly concerned with the ‘dandy’ figure—a young, effeminate and handsome man—whom he renders often lounging with a blank expression in luxuriant settings. In Bloomsbury revisited (air plants) (2017), for example, a comely man’s face is reflected in a golden mirror surrounded by ornamental objects such as a painted plate, a flickering candle and spidery succulents.
Similarly, in the 2018 painting How best to tolerate the stench of modernity, a freckled, adolescent-looking boy daintily holds a fan in a lush, quilted red space that dissolves into abstract shapes towards the bottom of the canvas. In four bathers by a river (2017), young men in various stages of undress wade into an inky body of water, surrounded by plants.
With their layered imageries, Bas’ paintings are the results of extensive research. He is informed by men’s fashion magazines and books including Boy Scout manuals and legends of the occult. Ultimately, a long-standing interest in an ‘otherworldly and coded history of homosexuality’ (as the artist puts it) unites his oeuvre.
The series ‘Insects from Abroad’—exhibited at Perrotin Tokyo in 2018—was inspired by an 1874 book describing foreign bugs—Bas was struck that the book’s poetic and fantastical language was similar to that used to describe dandies in the same century. Similarly, his series ‘Bright Young Things’—first exhibited at Lehmann Maupin in 2016—is based on the homoerotic undertones of the aristocrats of 1920s London.
In addition to portraiture, Bas is also known for his byzantine and eerie landscapes. Ubu Roi (the war march) (2009) depicts a fantastical scene replete with ornate castles, stormy cliffs, a rayless river and mysterious marching figures. These heady, dreamlike paintings arise from Bas’ interest in the paranormal, a fascination he attributes to mysterious experiences while growing up in suburban Florida.
Bas’ work has been featured in numerous solo and group exhibitions, including at Kunstverein Hannover; Brooklyn Museum, New York; Saatchi Gallery, London; and the 53rd Venice Biennale.
Other notable solo exhibitions include:
Hernan Bas’s works are held in major public and private collections globally. In the United States, his artworks have been collected by the Museum of Modern Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Los Angeles. Bas’s works have been exhibited at the Rubell Museum in Miami and the Bass Museum of Art, among others.
Hernan Bas’s paintings are characterised by their intricate detail and layered brushwork. He often incorporates references to classical poetry, mythology, and literature, creating narratives that intertwine adolescent adventures with the paranormal. His style reflects a blend of old-world romanticism and contemporary themes.
Yes, Hernan Bas has been the recipient of several awards and fellowships. In 1999, he received the McCullough Award for Painting from the Cleveland Institute of Art and a Matching Fellowship from the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. He was also awarded the Rema Hort Foundation Grant in 2002.
Ocula | 2026


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