A Balthus borrowed from the Museum of Modern Art is at the heart of the exhibition, which unites canonical and obscure figures. Balthus, The Street, 1933. Oil on ...
The artist Peter Doig, born in Edinburgh in 1959, has led a peripatetic existence, living and working in Trinidad, Montreal, London and New York. He secured his early reputation in the 1990s with a ...
A new exhibition at London’s Courtauld Gallery pits Doig against artists like Cézanne, Gauguin, and Van Gogh. Does it work? Doig has long admired the collection of The Courtauld Gallery. The ...
“I never try to create real spaces – only painted spaces. That’s all I am interested in. That may be why there is never really any specific time or place in my painting.” The quote is by Peter Doig, ...
At “House of Music,” a London exhibition of paintings by Peter Doig, songs he typically plays in his private studio help bring his work to life. By Emily LaBarge The artist organizes a show of ...
Limited-edition prints by Peter Doig, the Scottish-born artist known for his depictions of nature and nostalgia, go on sale today (Nov. 9) to benefit an ailing nonprofit in London. The work portrays ...
A retired corrections officer says he bought the painting from Doig in 1976, but Doig (now a famous artist) says that wasn't him. So the retiree... Artist Peter Doig Says He Didn't Paint This, And A ...
Born in Scotland, then brought up in Trinidad and Canada, Peter Doig had a childhood of sharp contrasts: big northern wintry skies and the bright Caribbean sunrise, icy cold and humid tropical heat.
The recent opening of a major Peter Doig show at the Courtauld Gallery in London is a true event for fans of the influential painter. Meanwhile, for observers of the behind-the-scenes machinations of ...
Bathus, The Street, 1933; oil on canvas, 6′ 4 3/4″ x 7′ 10 1/2″ (195 x 240 cm); James Thrall Soby Bequest. © The Museum of Modern Art “This exhibition was ...
Painting by Peter Doig or Peter Doige, “Peyote” (1976), 34 x 41 1/2 in, acrylic on muslin (courtesy Peter Bartlow Gallery) (click to enlarge) One of the most bizarre art authentication cases in recent ...