
Salman Toor
38
Works
13
Followers

Artist Spotlight
Salman Toor Paints the World Tenderly
In the fall of 2020, Salman Toor walked into the Whitney Museum of American Art not as a visitor but as the subject of his first major solo museum exhibition. "How Will I Know" announced to the broader art world what a devoted circle of collectors and curators had long understood: that Toor was producing some of the most emotionally intelligent figurative painting of his generation. The show drew immediate critical attention for its warmth, its psychological depth, and its quietly radical insistence on centering queer South Asian men in spaces of tenderness, pleasure, and private solidarity.… Continue reading
Collectors
Artists in conversation

Lynette Yiadom-Boakye

Yiadom-Boakye shares Toor's commitment to intimate figurative oil painting that centers non-white subjects in psychologically rich, ambiguous interior settings. Both artists use a warm tonal palette and loose brushwork to evoke mood and interiority rather than explicit narrative.

Chantal Joffe

Joffe's expressive figurative painting explores private, domestic moments with a similarly warm and tender gaze, often depicting figures in interior spaces rendered with gestural oil paint. Her focus on vulnerability and intimacy in everyday life parallels Toor's thematic and aesthetic concerns closely.

Njideka Akunyili Crosby

Crosby similarly fuses Western figurative painting traditions with non-Western cultural imagery to depict intimate domestic interiors populated by figures navigating layered cultural identities. Both artists use the interior scene as a site for exploring diaspora, belonging, and queer or private selfhood.
Artists who inspired them

Édouard Vuillard

Toor has directly cited Vuillard's intimist interiors as a formative influence, particularly his ability to dissolve figures into richly patterned domestic environments using a warm and compressed pictorial space. Vuillard's treatment of private bourgeois life as worthy of serious painterly attention deeply shaped Toor's own domestic subject matter.

Rembrandt van Rijn

Toor draws heavily on Rembrandt's mastery of chiaroscuro to create nocturnal, candlelit scenes in which figures emerge from deep shadow with psychological weight and warmth. Rembrandt's ability to confer dignity and interiority upon his subjects across all social classes directly informs Toor's approach to painting queer South Asian men.

Francisco Goya

Goya's Romantic nocturnes and his unflinching depiction of marginalized or vulnerable figures in charged social environments serve as a touchstone for Toor's darker, more politically inflected canvases. Toor has acknowledged Goya's influence in constructing scenes where intimacy and menace coexist within a single pictorial space.







