Wilson Hunt
In April 2022, Wilson made his Alpers Gallery debut.
Scroll down to read his artist's statement.
Scroll down to read his artist's statement.
The first 19 images shown here are new to the gallery in spring 2024.
In each thumbnail's caption, you can see if the painting is framed and
ready to hang, or currently unframed. Unframed paintings aren't on
active display, but instead are stored in the gallery in an archival carton.
We're always happy to show them. Just ask.
In each thumbnail's caption, you can see if the painting is framed and
ready to hang, or currently unframed. Unframed paintings aren't on
active display, but instead are stored in the gallery in an archival carton.
We're always happy to show them. Just ask.
The images below are all unframed pantings, which we keep
in a portfolio box. We're happy to show them to you.
Click on thumbnails to view each one's title and dimensions.
in a portfolio box. We're happy to show them to you.
Click on thumbnails to view each one's title and dimensions.
Archive of sold Wilson Hunt paintings
When I describe my work as abstract, it’s because it is
non-representational and originates in my imagination.
Many of my works are on paper, which I tape to a painting table,
sometimes wetting the paper, and laying down the first strokes of
paint, each stroke a response or complement to the one before it.
I look to build up a dynamic structure and a strong form.
There are many analogues to music in my process. I have listened to
much modern jazz in my life, and my work mirrors the improvisation
in jazz. Repeated colors offer a way to produce counterpoint and
to build up a structure on the page. I am enamored of color and
it is extremely important in my work.
My work, to me, conveys an organic look, which comes from my
lifelong appreciation of nature’s sometimes chaotic beauty.
Many of my paintings suggest landscapes, with some references --
perhaps subconscious — to a sky and a ground. In parallel with nature,
the history of painting in the 20th century has helped inform my work.
Specifically, Abstract Expressionist painters, like De Kooning, and colorists,
like Wolf Kahn, have exerted a profound and continuing influence.
non-representational and originates in my imagination.
Many of my works are on paper, which I tape to a painting table,
sometimes wetting the paper, and laying down the first strokes of
paint, each stroke a response or complement to the one before it.
I look to build up a dynamic structure and a strong form.
There are many analogues to music in my process. I have listened to
much modern jazz in my life, and my work mirrors the improvisation
in jazz. Repeated colors offer a way to produce counterpoint and
to build up a structure on the page. I am enamored of color and
it is extremely important in my work.
My work, to me, conveys an organic look, which comes from my
lifelong appreciation of nature’s sometimes chaotic beauty.
Many of my paintings suggest landscapes, with some references --
perhaps subconscious — to a sky and a ground. In parallel with nature,
the history of painting in the 20th century has helped inform my work.
Specifically, Abstract Expressionist painters, like De Kooning, and colorists,
like Wolf Kahn, have exerted a profound and continuing influence.