JOHN BAEDER

John Baeder is widely acknowledged as one of the foremost painters of the Photorealist school. His seminal work, represented in collections worldwide, focuses on diners and American roadside attractions, and reminds us of their place in our collective consciousness. 

His early black and white photographs, taken between 1962 and 1969, before he burst onto the New York art scene with a solo exhibit of paintings at legendary Ivan Karp’s OK Harris Gallery, are less known.

Remaining for many years in Baeder’s personal archives, Susan Edwards, former Executive Director of the Frist Art Museum, wrote of these images:

“For decades he regarded his own photographs as source material. Inevitably, Baeder's photographs are being reconsidered and recognized for their stand alone power in the artist's oeuvre.”

Baeder’s work is co-represented by MB Abram, Los Angeles, and ACA Galleries, New York.

Read about John Baeder’s remarkable life.

 
 



Vincent Scully, Professor of Art History and Architecture at Yale University, distinguished Baeder’s work from other photorealists:


“John Baeder’s paintings seem to me to differ from those of his brilliant Magic-Realist contemporaries as they are gentle, lyrical, and deeply in love with their subjects… Baeder is not haunted like Hopper by a sense of something empty, hollow, and solitary in the American experience. Instead, he is youthful, hopeful, a painter-poet who makes us see the beauty of common things—not how funny they are, or how disgusting, or how powerfully expressive even, or how frightening, or just how big—but how lovely, how seen with love… Baeder is entirely at home in his world, and he irradiates it.”

Baeder’s work was recently featured in the exhibit “Ordinary People Photorealism and Work of Art since 1968” at MOCA, Los Angeles, and is held in numerous international collections including the Whitney Museum; the Smithsonian; the Denver Art Museum; the Morris Museum of Art; Yale Art Gallery, and many others.

 

oil paintings


 

Watercolors


 

There Is No Other Cottage Like The Octo
& otto & Mickey’s

 
 

the Matchbook Covers Series

John Baeder’s art career exploded after an exhibition of his works based on postcards at Ivan Karp’s OK Harris Gallery in New York in the early ‘70s. Like Andy Warhol, also a protégé of Karp, Baeder emerged from the commercial world, his previous life as a superstar art director in the era of Mad Men. His evolving paintings of diners and roadside culture are complex and iconic examples of the Photorealist School. In 2017-18, John Baeder’s eyesight was failing due to severe macular degeneration, and Baeder returned to a concept which he had put on the shelf many years before, a series of paintings based on American matchbook covers from the 1920-40s. Baeder felt that the bold, direct, scaled down aspects of these works would accommodate the capabilities of his rapidly diminishing eyesight. These unique and fascinating works are the last narrative paintings from the Artist.

 

The Still Life: An Inner Road Trip

Baeder's quest to find his personal values reflected in the visual culture of roadside America coincided with his discovery of the essence of America's identity—as reflected in the lives of those connected with the institutions of roadside America. Since 2005, Baeder has been engaged in that sort of interpretation and dialogue, taking the measure of where he has been and gauging what he, through his creative work, might become. Baeder understood from the outset of his new photo series in 2011 that manipulating the concepts of reality and illusion were key to his new endeavor. Were these new compositions more about illusion—statements about the pure delight of color and form, with their accent on color harmonies and sensuous surfaces? Baeder anticipated that viewers would wonder "Are the flowers real? ls the automobile ‘photoshopped’ into the image (as most would expect these days), and why is it there to begin with? Or were these photographs intended as some form of realism?”. Baeder's new photo work was very different from the photo­graphs he shot earlier in his career. Instead of being part of the tradition of landscape or genre scenes, these were classic still lifes. Like the earlier kitchen still lifes, they seemed to be views into some sort of alternate reality. But, by capitalizing on photography's ability to seduce the eye, they have an even greater sense of the surreal about them. (From Jay Williams, “John Baeder’s Road Well Taken, The Vendome Press, New York, 2015.)