A quiet intimacy permeates Doron Langberg’s figurative paintings. Characterized by a loose, confident brushwork and a shifting sense of color, his works depict friends, lovers, and family in serene moments. Describing his work, Langberg says:
I think that because I work with people that are so close to me or that the relationship that I have with someone is what prompts the painting, I want the viewer to feel that sense of intimacy and closeness. I feel like for me that’s also part of the way that I use the material, it’s very gestural, it’s very physical it’s very tactile, and it’s brings the viewer closer to have an experience of the painting in terms of the process how it was made and the physicality of it.
For the Israeli-born, New York-based painter, his identity as a queer artist is also an important component in the act of making the work, seen here in Kyle. An element of closeness and comfort is palpable in the vantage point of the artist lying next to the reclining man, gazing at the side of his face. Langberg’s work has been shown at galleries in the US and Europe.