Digital catalog for upcoming Paul Burlin exhibition released

Peyton Wright Gallery Santa Fe, New Mexico, and Vallarino Fine Art,  New York, representing the estate of Paul Burlin and the Paul Burlin Art Trust, are pleased to announce an important exhibition of Burlin paintings Friday, October 6th through Friday, November 24th at Peyton Wright Gallery, accompanied by an exhibition catalog of 96 pages.

An opening reception for the exhibition Transformation of Spirit to Pigment: Harmony in Chaos will be held Friday, October 6th from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. Hard copies of the catalog will be available at the reception.

Endeavoring to calculate Burlin’s contributions to early modernism/expressionism in New Mexico one-hundred and ten years after his participation in the 1913 Armory Show and subsequent move to the state after the fact is challenging, but it can be said Burlin was not only the first Armory Show participant to arrive in New Mexico, but the earliest painter of Modernism in the region.

The exhibition and catalogue titled Transformation of Spirit to Pigment: Harmony in Chaos celebrates Paul Burlin’s mature works, ca. 1950 –1969, his most prolific and productive period and arguably his most poetic, with numerous canvases from the aforementioned period featured in Whitney Museum of American Art and the Museum of Modern Art exhibitions.

The catalogue (in its digital format at this link) is the most extensive biographic chronology of Burlin to date, including his exhibition history, literature and publications.


View the exhibition catalog


Paul Burlin (1886- 1969) was born in New York and pursued academic/artistic training at the National Academy of Design before choosing to pursue his studies informally. He visited the Southwest for the first time in 1910, and paintings from this visit were received warmly in New York and shown in a 1911 exhibition. As a result of this early success, he was one of the youngest artists (at age twenty-six) to participate in the 1913 Armory Show – the revolutionary exhibition of avant-garde European work that can be credited with introducing modern art to the United States and stimulating the development of modernism in America. There, Burlin’s work was exhibited alongside works by such artists as Picasso, Monet, Cézanne, and Duchamp. 

His move to Santa Fe, subsequent his participation in the Armory Show, would herald a new era of modernism in New Mexico. The Armory Show, he later recalled, had little impact on his work and yet he was affected; simultaneously unsettled and yet galvanized by the event.

Returning to the Southwest to live, he drew inspiration from the culture and the landscape. Like many modernists of the day, Burlin was fascinated by so-called “primitive” art, particularly the designs and palette of the Native cultures he encountered in New Mexico. In 1917 he met and married Natalie Curtis, a highly-regarded ethnomusicologist specializing in Native American music. Burlin was the first participant in the Armory show to live in New Mexico, and his time there had a profound impact, not only on his own work, but on the development of modernism throughout the Southwest.


 In 1921, Paul and Natalie Burlin moved to Paris as part of an exodus of expatriate artists responding to the provincialism of America after World War I, exemplified by the hostile reaction to his abstract work and other modern art. In Paris, Burlin found himself in the cultural center of modern art.  He studied European abstract artists, working with the Cubist Albert Gleizes, and further developed some of the intellectual and symbolic elements that he had begun in the Southwest.

Later that year, Natalie was killed in an automobile accident. Burlin was devastated. He moved back to the Southwest, but found no solace there, and soon returned to Europe. He continued to live in Paris until 1932, when he moved back to the United States in the midst of the Great Depression to work for the WPA.

During this time, Burlin’s work tended toward social-realism, experimenting with political and urban themes. Throughout the war, Burlin employed themes of war and persecution, drawing much of his inspiration from Picasso’s war paintings. Later years would see him visited by visual difficulties, undergoing early cornea transplants in the mid 1960’s, and at times legally blind but,. . . still painting.
Burlin exhibited throughout his career, and as a member of the American Congress of Artists was active in both the Provincetown Artists Colony and the MacDowell Colony in Peterborough, New Hampshire. He was represented by several prestigious New York galleries during his lifetime, including Edith Halpert’s Downtown Gallery and the Grace Borgenicht Gallery. A prominent retrospective of his work was sponsored by the American Federation of the Arts at the Philadelphia Art Alliance and the Whitney Museum in 1962.

Burlin’s work can be found in numerous private and public collections around the world, including the Albuquerque Museum, the New Mexico Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, and the Getty Museum in Los Angeles.