CELIA PAUL: INNERVISIONS

GLADSTONE presents Innervisions, an exhibition of new paintings by Celia Paul in New York, marking her first show with the gallery.

April 28 - June 13, 2026

Celia Paul paints as if she were listening for something that can’t be said any other way: a hush behind conversation, a pressure of feeling that gathers in a room long after the people have gone.

She depicts herself, her mother, and her sisters not merely as motifs, but as relationships shaped by years, grief, and the ordinary weather of family life. These same qualities have been named as “intimacy and inwardness,” and those words fit: Paul’s paintings often feel like private weather made visible, not spectacle offered up for applause.

The look of the paintings—often pared down, with large quiet fields and figures that seem to emerge out of air—can be mistaken for simplicity. But the austerity is a discipline. Paul’s portraits do not perform charisma; they seem to insist that the human face and posture are already dramatic enough.

Her figures tend to sit, stand, or recline with a kind of unshowy gravity. The paintings don’t so much describe a person as hold them in time, allowing the viewer to register how expression can be made from stillness.

Alongside the portraits, there is the sea. In a painter so devoted to rooms and bodies, the sea can read as counterpoint: an expanse that refuses enclosure, a surface that is always changing even when it looks calm. The framing of “the sea” as one of Paul’s central themes suggests it isn’t merely scenery; it is a way of thinking in paint about distance, return, and what cannot be possessed.

What is striking, especially in light of how often women artists are cast as satellites, is how Paul’s work steadily reclaims authorship. She has made paintings that engage with the legacy of Freud and his circle, but from her own vantage point, refusing to be fixed forever as someone else’s subject.

Previous
Previous

VIVIEN ZHANG: FIELD CONDITIONS

Next
Next

DARREN ALMOND: BETWEEN THE LINES