Chloe Wise

Chloe Wise, Where Pleasure Meets Paint
Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial
“I want the work to feel like it has a sense of humor but also a sense of genuine feeling underneath it.”
Chloe Wise, interview with Cultured Magazine
When Chloe Wise presented her work at the Brant Foundation in Greenwich, Connecticut, the response confirmed what a growing circle of collectors and curators had quietly known for years: this Canadian painter and sculptor operates at a rare frequency, one where art history, appetite, and self awareness converge with genuine wit and formal intelligence. Her figurative oil paintings and trompe l'oeil sculptures have earned her a devoted international following, and her presence in serious private collections signals a career that is no longer merely emerging but fully, confidently arrived. The conversation around her work has expanded from gallery circles into the broader cultural moment, where questions about image, identity, and the aesthetics of daily life feel more urgent than ever. Wise was born in 1990 and grew up in Montreal, a city whose bilingual cultural richness and strong tradition of figurative painting left a mark on her sensibility.

Chloe Wise
Portrait made for the artists mom but disliked by the artists mom, 2020
She studied at Concordia University, where she developed her technical foundations in both painting and sculpture, before making her way into the New York art world, a city that would sharpen her eye for the theater of consumption and social performance. Montreal gave her the classical grounding; New York gave her the material. The result is a practice that reads as deeply personal and rigorously observed, rooted in lived experience rather than theoretical abstraction. Her artistic development reflects an unusual synthesis of old and new.
Wise paints with the kind of confident, loaded brushwork that recalls the Flemish still life tradition and the sensual directness of painters like Lucian Freud and John Currin, but her canvases are populated with subjects drawn entirely from contemporary life: friends at parties, figures on their phones, faces caught between self presentation and genuine feeling. She also works in sculpture, and it is her trompe l'oeil bread sculptures designed to resemble luxury handbags that first brought her widespread attention, objects that collapse the distance between haute couture and carbohydrates with a precision that is both conceptually pointed and genuinely funny. This willingness to embrace humor without sacrificing craft is one of the qualities that makes her work so immediately engaging. Among her signature paintings, the works completed around 2019 and 2020 stand as some of her most assured.

Chloe Wise
Ana in a Leopard Hat, 2020
"Oliver After Touching Sheep" from 2019, rendered in oil on canvas, captures a subject in that particular state of distracted ease that Wise renders better than almost anyone working today. "Ana in a Leopard Hat" from 2020 is a portrait of tremendous warmth and specificity, the kind of painting that makes the viewer feel they know the subject intimately even upon first encounter. The diptych "A poem and a sonnet and an essay and a sacrifice" from 2020, painted in oil on linen, demonstrates her ambition at scale, folding narrative suggestion into the physical architecture of two panels. And the quietly devastating "Portrait made for the artists mom but disliked by the artists mom," also from 2020, layers personal confession directly into the title, making the viewer complicit in a private joke that is also a genuine act of vulnerability.
Her prints, including works such as "Gluten Freedom" and "Polysemic Primavera," extend her sensibility into editions, making her work accessible to a wider range of collectors without diluting its intelligence. For collectors, Wise represents a compelling convergence of factors. Her technical command is undeniable, and her paintings reward extended looking in the way that only serious craft can sustain. Her subjects and themes connect directly to the cultural conversations that define this moment: the performance of identity online, the aesthetics of consumption, the complex pleasure of food and fashion and friendship.

Chloe Wise
Gluten Freedom
Works on linen and canvas from her 2018 to 2021 period are particularly sought after, and the intimacy of her portraiture means that individual works carry a sense of personal weight that gives them lasting resonance in a collection. Collectors who have acquired her work early have found that it holds its own in dialogue with both historical figurative painting and work by her contemporaries, a testament to the genuine depth of her practice. In the broader context of contemporary figurative painting, Wise belongs to a generation that has reclaimed representation from the long shadow of conceptualism and given it new urgency. Her work sits in productive conversation with painters such as Cecily Brown, Lisa Yuskavage, and Nicole Eisenman, artists who have navigated the terrain between pleasure and critique, between the seductive surface of painting and its capacity for psychological depth.
Like those painters, Wise uses the figurative tradition not as nostalgia but as a living language, capable of saying things about the present that no other visual medium can quite manage. Her sculptures add another dimension entirely, invoking the object based wit of Claes Oldenburg while arriving at something distinctly her own. What makes Wise matter today, and what will ensure her work endures, is the quality of her attention. She looks at people with genuine curiosity and affection, and her canvases carry that warmth without ever tipping into sentimentality.

Chloe Wise
Oliver After Touching Sheep, 2019
She is equally clear eyed about the absurdities of the world she depicts, the brand hierarchies, the social rituals, the endless performance of selfhood, and yet she never allows critique to curdle into contempt. The result is a body of work that feels genuinely alive, rooted in friendship and appetite and the specific textures of contemporary experience while reaching back toward the oldest pleasures painting can offer. For collectors and institutions investing in the art of this moment, Chloe Wise is not a discovery waiting to happen. She is, very simply, one of the most compelling painters working today.
Explore books about Chloe Wise