Salman Toor (born 1983)[1] is a Pakistani painter based in the United States. His works depict the imagined lives of young men of South Asian-birth, displayed in close range in either South Asia and New York City fantasized settings.[2] Toor lives and works in New York City.[1]
Biography
Salman Toor was born in 1983 in Lahore, Pakistan. He made pictures when he was a child, drawing his imaginary friends and scenarios.[3]
From 2020 to 2021, Toor's recent paintings were the subject of a solo exhibition, Salman Toor: How Will I Know at the Whitney Museum of American Art.[11][12][13] From 2021 to 2022, Toor's painting, Museum Boys (2021) is on view at the Frick Collection; as part of the artist residency and the exhibition, Living Histories: Queer Views and Old Masters where it is placed in a room in conversation with two paintings by Johannes Vermeer, Officer and Laughing Girl (made between 1655 and 1660) and Mistress and Maid (c. 1667).[14][15] In 2022, in an exhibition similar to that at the Frick, Toor's works were placed in conversation with old master painting's from the museum's collection in the exhibition No Ordinary Love at the Baltimore Museum of Art in Baltimore, Maryland.[16] In 2023, the exhibition will the voyage in a traveling modified version to the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University and will be placed in concert with their European classic paintings as well.[17]
Toor has described that his work is concerned with various themes, such as the treatment of brown men and young people in public and private spaces and the role of technology in daily life.[20] Curator Ambika Trasi has noted, ”They are ruminations on the identifications variously imposed on and adopted by queer South Asian men living in the diaspora”.[20] In doing so, Trasi has written that Toor aims to include brown men in the art historical canon that is often missing this representation.[20]
Growing up in Pakistan, Toor explained an interview that he drew inspiration from Pakistani advertisements.[20] Once he began to focus more on art, Toor found inspiration in paintings from the Baroque, Neoclassical, and Rococo eras.[21] Specifically Toor describes being inspired by Van Dyck, Rubens, Caravaggio, and Watteau.[21] Curators note Toor's art historical knowledge makes its way into his work.[20][22] For example, critic and curator Joseph Wolin observes that Toor's The Bar on East 13th directly references Manet's A Bar at the Folies-Bergere.[22]
In terms of his figuration, Toor has explained, “I like these seemingly undernourished and hairy bodies of color inhabiting familiar, bourgeois, urban, interior spaces. I see these boys or men as well-educated, creative types discovering what it means to live an artist’s life in New York City and in the thick of changing ideas about race, immigration, and foreignness, and also what it means to be American. Sometimes they can look like lifestyle images. They are also fantasies about myself and my community."[21]
Curators have noted Toor's paintings make use of bright, saturated colors to evoke emotion.[20] Green is one of the most notable colors in his work. The artist cites the “nocturnal"[21] quality that green can give to a painting, as well as its conflicting associations with poison and glamor. Toor works from memory and often depicts his friends in his paintings.
Toor illustrated Amitav Ghosh's 2021 book in verse, Jungle Nama.[23]
Art Market
According to salesroom, Toor has performed well in the art market since 2020.[24] While working in Pakistan, collectors Taimur Hassan and Kiran Nadar frequently purchased his work.[24] After moving to New York, curators noted a change in style less reliant on master studies.[21] Toor's Whitney show sold almost entirely before opening to museum benefactors.[24][20]
Toor's first appearance in the auctions was on the 20th of October at Phillips Auction House in London where Aashiana (Hearth and Home) sold for £138,600, double its estimate.[25] On December 15, 2020, Liberty Porcelain (2012) went for £378,000 at Phillips Auction House in London.[26] In June 2021 at the Phillips Auction House in Hong Kong, Girl with Driver (2013) sold for $890,000, which was five times the estimated price.[27]
Exhibitions
2023
No Ordinary Love
HOMA - Honolulu
2022
No Ordinary Love, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, Maryland [28]
2020
How will I know, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York [29]
^ abcGleadell, Colin. 2021. “A Pandemic Chronology: Part Two: From Frieze to the US Election.” Art Monthly, no. 444 (March): 43–45. https://search-ebscohost-com.ezproxy.bu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aft&AN=148914352&site=ehost-live&scope=site.
^Gleadell, Colin. 2021. “Salerooms: A Pandemic Chronology Part Three: The Last Lap.” Art Monthly, no. 445 (April): 43–45. https://search-ebscohost-com.ezproxy.bu.edu/login.aspx?direct=true&db=aft&AN=149588879&site=ehost-live&scope=site.