Chris Succo

Chris Succo's Electric Paintings Demand Your Attention
Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial
There is a particular kind of energy that hums through a Chris Succo canvas, something close to the feeling of hearing a record that is almost too loud, almost too fast, almost too much, and yet completely, undeniably right. That feeling has been catching up with the broader art world in recent years, as Succo's work has moved from the underground currents of Berlin's painting scene into international gallery presentations and serious private collections. Born in 1982, the German artist has spent the better part of two decades building a body of work that refuses to behave, refuses to whisper, and refuses to apologize for any of it. The result is a practice that feels increasingly essential as contemporary painting searches for new terms of engagement.
![Chris Succo — Everything In It´s Right Place #2 [bknp]](https://rtwaymdozgnhgluydsys.supabase.co/storage/v1/object/public/artwork-images/auction-lots/NY010615-172015-lot1774410519011.jpg)
Chris Succo
Everything In It´s Right Place #2 [bknp]
Succo came of age in a Germany that was still metabolizing the enormous cultural rupture of reunification, a country where questions of identity, subcultural belonging, and artistic legitimacy were being renegotiated in real time. Like many artists of his generation shaped by the 1990s, his visual and emotional vocabulary was formed as much by record sleeves, fanzines, skate graphics, and the iconography of punk and post punk as it was by anything encountered in a museum. This is not background noise in his biography. It is the foundation.
The urgent, hand made, intensely personal aesthetic of those underground cultures taught Succo something that formal art education rarely does: that feeling and speed and rawness can be more honest than finish and resolution. His development as a painter reflects that understanding at every stage. Working primarily in oil and lacquer, often on canvas and linen, Succo layers paint with a gestural confidence that reads simultaneously as spontaneous and deeply considered. Text fragments appear and disappear within his compositions, sometimes legible, sometimes worn back to near abstraction, functioning less as statements than as traces of thought or memory.

Chris Succo
Open The Zipper, 2013
Figurative imagery, when it surfaces, is rendered with a lo fi urgency that owes something to artists like Albert Oehlen and Martin Kippenberger while remaining distinctly Succo's own register. His frames, frequently painted wood constructions made by the artist himself, extend the work's total sensibility beyond the canvas edge, making clear that every element of presentation is part of the painting's meaning. Looking at the arc of his work through the early 2010s to the present, certain pieces stand as genuine landmarks in his practice. "Flesh 1" from 2014, executed in oil and lacquer on canvas in the artist's own frame, demonstrates the full weight of his approach: a painting that feels both viscerally physical and emotionally charged, the title alone operating as a kind of stripped down provocation.
"Open The Zipper" from 2013 is equally significant, combining oil, lacquer, linen, adhesive, and estate emulsion in a way that treats the canvas almost as a site rather than a surface. Works like "Instant Crush" and "On the Pulse of Morning 2," both from 2014, show an artist in full command of his energy, able to sustain intensity across very different emotional registers. Titles like "Go Your Own Way," "Shameless is a Talent," and "Pretty Girls Always Have Friends" carry the spirit of subcultural cool without ironic distance, suggesting genuine affection for the worlds they invoke. For collectors, the appeal of Succo's work sits at an interesting intersection.

Chris Succo
Shameless is a Talent n°3
There is the immediate, almost physical pull of the paintings themselves, the way they hold a room and reward sustained attention. But there is also the coherence and integrity of a practice built without compromise, by an artist who has never softened his position to meet market expectations. Collectors who have acquired Succo's work tend to be those who trust their own eyes rather than waiting for institutional validation, which is itself a meaningful kind of curatorial intelligence. As his profile has continued to grow through gallery exhibitions and international exposure, the work of those early, committed collectors looks increasingly prescient.
The artist's insistence on making his own frames is also worth noting for serious collectors: it means no two works exist in isolation, and the frame is always part of the work's provenance and integrity. Within the broader landscape of contemporary painting, Succo occupies a specific and valuable position. He shares DNA with the German tradition of expressive, figuratively inflected painting associated with artists like Oehlen, Kippenberger, and the wider NEO Expressionist moment, while also connecting to an international generation of painters who have drawn equally from street art, graphic design, and music culture. Artists such as André Butzer and Markus Selg offer points of comparison within the German context, while the work of Dana Schutz or Oscar Murillo reflects parallel ambitions in other national contexts.

Chris Succo
Instant Crush, 2014
What distinguishes Succo within this company is the particular purity of his commitment to the underground register, the sense that the work has never traded its origins for respectability, even as respectability has gradually arrived on its own terms. The question of legacy is one that Succo's work answers quietly but convincingly. At a moment when painting is arguably more scrutinized and more contested than at any point in recent decades, his canvases offer a reminder that the medium's power has always lived in the encounter between a maker's urgency and a viewer's attention. There is nothing academic or theoretical about standing in front of a Succo painting and feeling your pulse quicken.
That is a real thing, and it is rare. As new generations of collectors and curators continue to map the contemporary painting scene, the coherence, ambition, and emotional honesty of Chris Succo's practice will ensure that his work remains not just relevant but genuinely necessary. The paintings are already making that argument on their own.