Matt Connors Biography

Matt Connors is a painter with a profound interest in technique and colour. His work draws upon the history of painting and processes, particularly minimalism and abstraction, but is also influenced by design, poetry, writing and music. While his visual vocabulary is often borrowed from the modernist canon–colours, gestures, grids, framing devices and compositions–Connors’ approach to his work is resolutely contemporary in both method and conception. In terms of materials and colouration, his work triggers emotional and intuitive responses. At the same time, it opens up a range of intellectual questions concerning mimesis, iteration and simulacra. Connors often works in series of interlinked, yet wholly autonomous works, in which a lively dialogue is established between repetition and variations in colours and form. Although his paintings might appear to depict something ‘real’–a familiar work of art for example–there is, in fact, no ‘original’. Taken to the logical conclusion, Connors’ paintings could be viewed as having superseded the reality upon which they are based. Matt Connors is also known for his large-scale installations and artist books.

Recent solo and two-person museum exhibitions include Painter, Painter at the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis (2013), Impressionism, MoMA PS1, New York (2012), Gas... Telephone... One Hundred Thousand Rubles, Kunsthalle Düsseldorf, Germany (2011), and Concentrations 54: Matt Connors and Fergus Feehily, Dallas Museum of Art (2011). In 2012, Matt Connors received the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship Grant and the Belgacom Art Prize. In 2012, he published the award-winning book A Bell is a Cup.

Matt Connors was born in Chicago in 1973. He lives and works in New York and Los Angeles.

Courtesy Xavier Hufkens

Read More
Matt Connors contemporary artist
Matt Connors Pricing / Available Works
Enquire

Works at Xavier Hufkens

Recently Exhibited

Works Elsewhere

Represented By

Matt Connors in Ocula Magazine

Explore and Follow Artists Shaping Contemporary Art

Loading...
The art world in focus