Jim Hodges

Jim Hodges, Where Beauty Meets Everything

By the editors at The Collection·April 20, 2026

Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial

When I make art, I think about its ability to connect with others, to bring them into the process.

Jim Hodges

In 2025, Jim Hodges delivered one of the most quietly radiant works of his career: "life invites the garden (for MCA Chicago)," a luminous panel of acrylic and pastel with 24 karat gold on linen that seems to breathe with the accumulated energy of a life spent looking closely at the world. The work is characteristic of everything that has made Hodges one of the most beloved and intellectually rigorous artists of his generation, combining material sumptuousness with an emotional directness that stops viewers in their tracks. That a painter who thinks like a drawer and makes like a sculptor can produce something this tender and this formally ambitious in the same gesture is a reminder of why collectors, curators, and fellow artists keep returning to his practice with fresh eyes. Born in 1957, Hodges grew up in Spokane, Washington, a place far from the coastal centers of the American art world, and that distance may have cultivated the particular self reliance and sincerity that runs through everything he makes.

Jim Hodges — Together

Jim Hodges

Together, 1993

He studied at the Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, arriving in New York at a moment when the city was raw and alive with possibility, when artists were forging new relationships between the personal and the political, between craft and concept. The AIDS crisis shaped his early years as a working artist in ways that are inseparable from his art, lending his investigations of mortality, desire, and ephemeral beauty an urgency that never tips into sentimentality. Hodges came to wider attention in the early 1990s, a period when his practice crystallized around materials that were humble, domestic, and deeply charged: artificial flowers, paper napkins, fabric, chain. His 1993 work "Diary of Flowers (CLOSE)," composed of pen and ink drawings on paper napkins assembled in 57 parts, is a landmark of that period.

Each napkin is both throwaway and precious, covered in floral imagery that accumulates into something overwhelming in its tenderness. The choice of napkins was not arbitrary. It spoke to meals shared, to hands pressed together, to the ordinary ceremonies by which people mark their love for one another. Also from 1993, "Together" stands as one of his most enduring early statements, a work whose very title encapsulates the relational ethics at the heart of his practice.

Jim Hodges — Wa Wa Wa

Jim Hodges

Wa Wa Wa

Perhaps no single work brought Hodges to broader public consciousness more decisively than his monumental spider web constructed from metal chain. Stretching across vast architectural spaces, the piece transforms industrial material into something gossamer and fragile, insisting that strength and delicacy are not opposites but collaborators. This ability to hold contradiction in suspension is one of Hodges's great gifts. His mirror works, including the 2010 "black mirror on canvas on board, in two parts," play with reflection and opacity, presence and absence, inviting viewers to find themselves within the work while simultaneously obscuring the view.

I love spatial relationships and dimensionality. I'm interested in theatrical moments and choreographing experiences in space. I think as a drawer and make as a sculptor.

Jim Hodges

The theatrical dimension of his practice is not incidental. Hodges has spoken about choreographing experiences in space, and standing before one of his installations, you understand exactly what he means. The room becomes a stage and you become a willing participant. The 1999 work "With" adds another register to this already rich vocabulary, using wood, metal panel, ceramic sockets, and light bulbs in two parts to explore illumination both literal and metaphorical.

Jim Hodges — Noticed, at rest (a light)

Jim Hodges

Noticed, at rest (a light)

Light in Hodges's hands is never merely decorative. It is the medium through which connection happens, the warm glow that makes visibility possible, the reminder that to be seen is to be known. "I've Pictured Us..." from 2008, an archival pigment print on transparent mylar, continues this investigation of vision and longing, the transparency of the support giving the image a quality of apparition, as though what we are looking at might dissolve if we turn away too quickly.

These works ask us to look slowly, and that is no small request in the current moment. From a collecting perspective, Hodges represents a rare convergence of critical standing and genuine emotional accessibility. His works are held in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, institutions that do not acquire lightly. The range of his practice means that entry points exist at multiple scales and price levels, from works on paper that reward intimate domestic display to large scale installations that transform institutional and private spaces alike.

Jim Hodges — life invites the garden (for MCA Chicago)

Jim Hodges

life invites the garden (for MCA Chicago), 2025

Collectors drawn to artists such as Felix Gonzalez Torres, Wolfgang Laib, or Kiki Smith will find in Hodges a kindred sensibility: the use of modest or found materials to address the largest possible themes, a refusal to separate formal beauty from human feeling. Within the broader narrative of late twentieth and early twenty first century American art, Hodges occupies a position that is at once central and somewhat apart from easy categorization. He emerged alongside a generation of artists reckoning with identity, loss, and the politics of visibility, yet his work has always been too invested in formal pleasure and material sensuousness to sit comfortably under any single banner. He is a sculptor who draws, a drawer who installs, an artist whose practice moves fluidly between the monumental and the intimate without any apparent strain.

His influences are broad and include the legacy of Arte Povera in his elevation of humble materials, the emotional directness of Abstract Expressionism, and the conceptual rigor of minimalism, though he wears none of these debts heavily. What endures about Jim Hodges, what keeps his work feeling urgent and alive more than three decades into a distinguished career, is the quality of attention he brings to everything. His works ask us to notice: to notice the beauty in a chain, the weight in a napkin, the light in a room, the person standing beside us. "When I make art," he has said, "I think about its ability to connect with others, to bring them into the process.

" That ambition, stated so plainly, is in fact extraordinarily difficult to realize, and Hodges realizes it again and again. For collectors seeking work that will continue to open rather than close, that will ask questions rather than provide answers, there are few living artists more worthy of sustained and devoted attention.

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