Scott Kahn

Scott Kahn

18 avenue de Matignon Paris, 75008, France Thursday, November 18, 2021–Saturday, December 18, 2021


summer sun by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Summer Sun, 2021

Price on Request

cliffs at stoke fleming iii by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Cliffs at Stoke Fleming III, 1987

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on the path by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

On the Path, 1984

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tree of life by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Tree of Life, 2009

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gina's studio by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Gina's Studio, 1979

Price on Request

portrait of fred kirwin by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Portrait of Fred Kirwin, 1987

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the well by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

The Well, 2001

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waning moon by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Waning Moon, 2021

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portrait of scott kahn by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Portrait of Scott Kahn, 1998

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changeable weather by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Changeable Weather, 2007

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storm coming by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Storm Coming, 1984

Price on Request

doorways by scott kahn

Scott Kahn

Doorways, 1988

Price on Request

Almine Rech ⎜Paris, Matignon is pleased to present Scott Kahn’s first solo exhibition with the gallery, on view from November 18 to December 18, 2021.

Every day, Scott Kahn paints what he calls his ‘visual diary.’ His itinerary is quite peculiar in that he has never abided by the schools highlighted in common narratives on American Modern art (be it Abstract Expressionism, Minimal art, or Conceptual art, to name a few). Yet, his own path led him to cross several moments of that history, synchronously and asynchronously. From the world of the first generation of the New York School around which he gravitated while attending Theodoros Stamos’ class at the Art Students League, to the so-called grid painters, and finally culminating in adopting a representational mode of painting and moving to Sag Harbor in the late 1970s, Scott Kahn’s ‘visual diary’ stands as a testimony of a life in painting. In his own words, he paints from life, which does not mean that he solely paints what he beholds, rather, it hints at how every strain of his life feeds into his art. Scott Kahn feels himself to be an American painter; a sentiment he finds in New England architecture for instance—whose houses he likes for their honesty, straightforwardness, and classical references—and realizes by making pictures based on components that share the same primal, foundational, elementary qualities: the moon, sun, day, night, dark, light.
— Théo de Luca, Author, Yale University