Celia Paul

Celia Paul
The Spinsters, Pink Dawn
BT Tower, Museum, Stars
Tower, Moon, Tree, Museum
Jane
Laguna (1)
Weeping Muse and Running Tap
Old Woman Embracing Her Young Self
My Sisters by the Sea
British Museum and Plane Tree Branches
Hot Summer Sea
Force
Self-Portrait, April 2021
The Path Home
Rising Clouds and Gulls
Study of Kate with a Mountain
My Mother and the Mountain
In the Studio, Night
Kate in a Starry Landscape
The Sea, The Sea
Window (nude self-portrait)
British Museum, Morning
Dieppe
Overwhelmed by Beauty (Self-Portrait)
Roses in the Studio
Blue Bed
Kate in Red
Room, Great Russell Street, Morning
Painter Against Water
Mountain Torrent
Headland, Lee Abbey
Chrysanthemums in May
Mandy
Frank
Sunlight on Weeping Birch
The Mouth of the Cave
My Father's House
Prayer for Steven Kupfer
My Chair
Clem
Steve, October-November
Self-Portrait, February 2022
My Mother and God
Laguna (3)
Laguna (2)
Lilacs
Hyacinths
British Museum, Night
Last Painting of Steve
Rivkah's Crysanthemums
Lucian Freud’s Studio Window, Holland Park
My Chair (3)
Figure Approaching the British Museum, Seen Through Plane Tree Branches
Lola
Pia
Self-Portrait, Late Spring to Late Winter
Self-Portrait in Sunlight
Reclining Painter
Steve in his Rowing Boat, Austria
Small Waterfall
Colony of Ghosts
Painter at Home
Peony Shedding its Petals
Weeping Muse
Overshadowed
Dreaming of the Path to the Sea
Daffodils
Interior
Steve, Trisselwand, Dawn
Swan, Cambridge
That Obscure Object of Desire
Eve (aged 7)
Pink Rosebuds
Looking Back: Bella, Me, Lucian
St George's Bloomsbury, Bright Spring
My Plane Tree in front of the British Museum
Ghost of a Girl with an Egg
Self-Portrait, April 2020
BT Tower and Plane Tree
Vase of Honesty
Skying Birds
Tower, Tree, Museum
Self-Portrait in a Narrow Mirror

Born in 1959 in Trivandrum, India. Lives and works in London, UK

Celia Paul mines complexities of interior and exterior life, looping back and forth through time to the people and places closest to her. From 1977 to 2007 she worked on a series of paintings of her mother, and since then she has concentrated on painting her four sisters, especially her sister Kate, as well as a number of portraits of other family members and close friends. She has also produced a large number of evocative self-portraits over the course of her career. Constancy and change, and how the past is always held in dialogue with the eternal present of the painted image, are, for Paul, inextricably linked to a consideration of self: the immediate self as well as the selves we have been in shadows, mirrors or memories, and the many selves we recognise or perhaps refute in the perception of others.

Further cornerstones of Paul’s art include seascapes and depictions of her home and studio. Home as a quest and a question is an encompassing theme, while water, representing the eternal, the flow of time, or a sense of bodies becoming dissolute and consciousness shifting to a more elemental plane, is an enduring motif. Together, they lend Paul’s work its particular tempo of movement and stasis, while a new-found sense of self-acceptance, even defiance, in Paul’s recent self-portraits suggests that concepts of rootedness and belonging might reside not in a physical place so much as in a state of being, which for Paul lies in the act of painting.

About the Artist

Celia Paul was born in 1959 in Trivandrum, India. She lives and works in London.

Major solo exhibitions include Celia Paul, curated by Hilton Als, at Yale Center for British Art, New Haven, Connecticut, USA (2018) touring to The Huntington, San Marino, California, USA (2019); Desdemona for Celia by Hilton, Gallery Met, New York, USA (2015–16); Gwen John and Celia Paul: Painters in Parallel, Pallant House Gallery, Chichester, UK (2012–13); The Grave’s Art Gallery, Sheffield, UK (2005) and Abbot Hall, Kendal, UK (2004).

The artist’s work has been featured in group exhibitions including Acts of Creation: On Art and Motherhood, Arnolfini, Bristol, UK, travelling to MAC Birmingham, UK; Millenium Gallery, Sheffield, UK; Dundee Contemporary Arts (DCA), UK (2025); Real Families: Stories of Change, The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, UK (2023–24); Joan Didion: What She Means, curated by Hilton Als, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, USA (2022–23); Pictus Porrectus; Reconsidering the Full-Length Portrait, Bell House, Newport, Rhode Island, USA (2022); Me, Myself, I – Artists’ Self-Portraits, Royal West of England Academy, Bristol, UK (2022); Works on Paper, Galleri Bo Bjerggaard, Copenhagen, Denmark (2019); All Too Human: Bacon, Freud and a Century of Painting Life, Tate Britain, London, UK (2018); La Diablesse, Tramps, London, UK (2016); NO MAN’S LAND: Women Artists from the Rubell Family Collection, Rubell Family Collection, Miami, USA (2015–16); Forces in Nature curated by Hilton Als at Victoria Miro, London, UK (2015); Recent acquisitions: Arcimboldo to Kitaj, British Museum, London, UK (2013); Self-Consciousness, curated by Peter Doig and Hilton Als, VeneKlasen/Werner gallery, Berlin, Germany (2010); The School of London: Bacon to Bevan, Musée Maillol, Paris, France (1998) and British Figurative Painting of the 20th Century, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, Israel (1992).

Her work is in collections including Abbot Hall, Kendal, UK; British Museum, London, UK; Carlsberg Foundation, Copenhagen, Denmark; The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, UK; The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, UK; Frissiras Museum, Athens, Greece; Herzog Ulrich Gallery, Brunswick, Germany; Metropolitan Museum, New York, USA; Morgan Library and Museum, New York, USA; National Portrait Gallery, London, UK; New Hall Art Collection, Murray Edwards College, Cambridge, UK; Rubell Family Collection, Miami, USA; Ruth Borchard Collection, London, UK; Saatchi Collection, London, UK; Victoria and Albert Museum, London, UK; and the Yale Center for British Art, Connecticut, USA.

In 2022, a solo exhibition of new works – Memory and Desire – was held at Victoria Miro, London, UK to coincide with the publication of Letters to Gwen John, a Jonathan Cape book by the artist which centres on a series of letters addressed to the painter Gwen John (1876–1939), who has long been a tutelary spirit for Paul. The artist’s first book, Self-Portrait, was published in 2019. Also in 2019, Celia Paul was awarded Harper’s Bazaar Artist of the Year.

The monograph Celia Paul: Works 1975-2025 was published by MACK in 2025. Beginning with the earliest works made by Paul at the age of fifteen, this extensive 500-page volume weaves a chronological sequence of work through six decades, and includes writing by Hilton Als, Clare Carlisle, Karl Ove Knausgaard and Rowan Williams, as well as a new text by Paul herself.

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Exhibitions

12
Celia Paul: Myself, Among Others
28 October-09 December 2023 Celia Paul: Myself, Among Others venice
Celia Paul: My Studio
26 June-25 July 2020 Celia Paul: My Studio london
Victoria Miro: 40 Years
06 June-01 August 2025 Victoria Miro: 40 Years london
Venice Portraits: Unmasked
12 February-27 March 2022 Venice Portraits: : Unmasked venice
Celia Paul: Self-Portrait
10 November-12 December 2020 Celia Paul: Self-Portrait venice
Celia Paul: Memory and Desire
06 April-07 May 2022 Celia Paul: Memory and Desire london
The Sky was Blue the Sea was Blue and the Boy was Blue
24 February-30 April 2021 The Sky was Blue the Sea was Blue and the Boy was Blue
Intimacy
08 June-30 July 2022 Intimacy london
Victoria Miro: 40 years, Venice
04 July-06 September 2025 Victoria Miro: 40 years, Venice venice
Celia Paul: Colony of Ghosts
14 March-17 April 2025 Celia Paul: Colony of Ghosts london
The Story of Art as it’s Still Being Written
08 September-01 October 2022 The Story of Art as it’s Still Being Written london
Chiaroscuro: A Century of Charcoal
18 June-30 August 2024 Chiaroscuro: A Century of Charcoal miro presents

Selected works

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