Karyn Lyons

Karyn Lyons Paints the World Tender

By the editors at The Collection·April 21, 2026

Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial

There is a particular kind of attention that defines the best figurative painting of our moment, an attention that is both forensic and deeply felt, that looks at the world with clear eyes and an open heart. Karyn Lyons possesses this quality in abundance. Her works, which have been appearing with growing frequency at regional and specialty auction houses across the United States, are generating quiet but unmistakable enthusiasm among collectors who recognize in her canvases and vellum panels something rare: a painter who can hold abstraction and representation in genuine tension without letting either impulse dominate the other. In 2021 alone, Lyons produced a remarkable cluster of works that has since become central to conversations about where expressive figurative painting is headed.

Karyn Lyons — Dad's Playboy

Karyn Lyons

Dad's Playboy, 2021

Lyons is an American painter working squarely within a tradition that runs from the great European figurativists through the postwar American painters who brought psychological heat to the canvas. Where she comes from, in the biographical sense, informs her practice in ways that are visible even before you know anything about her. Her work carries the texture of lived experience, of a person who has spent real time looking at other human beings and caring about what she finds. The intimacy of her subject matter, from private domestic moments to charged interpersonal encounters, suggests an artist shaped by close observation of the everyday world rather than by the more rarefied atmospheres of certain academic painting traditions.

Her development as a painter reflects a sustained engagement with the history of Western figuration, and the presence of a work titled "Ingres Study Number 2" from 2012 tells us something important about her formation. Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres is not an easy touchstone. He demands precision, an understanding of contour as a moral as well as an aesthetic commitment, and a willingness to slow down and truly look. That Lyons was working through Ingres a decade ago, making formal studies in oil on vellum, suggests a painter who built her expressive freedom on a rigorous technical foundation.

Karyn Lyons — The Love Letter

Karyn Lyons

The Love Letter, 2018

By the time she arrived at the mature works of 2018 through 2021, she had earned every liberty she took. The choice of vellum as a support is itself worth dwelling on. Vellum is a material with a long and distinguished history in European art and manuscript culture, and it brings particular qualities to oil paint: a luminosity, a slight resistance, a surface that rewards deliberate mark making. Lyons has made this unusual support central to much of her recent practice, and the results are paintings that seem to glow from within.

Works like "Heartbreaker," "The Celebration," "The Summer Intern," and "Dad's Playboy," all completed in 2021, share this quality of inner light, as though the subjects themselves are generating warmth rather than simply receiving it from an external source. The effect is intimate and immediate in equal measure. The titles of Lyons's works deserve attention in their own right. "The Love Letter" from 2018, executed in oil and graphite on canvas, announces a preoccupation with communication, with the gap between feeling and its expression, that runs throughout her practice.

Karyn Lyons — Heartbreaker

Karyn Lyons

Heartbreaker, 2021

"Heartbreaker" and "Dad's Playboy" introduce a knowing, slightly wry quality, an awareness of cultural mythology and its complicated relationship to actual human experience. "The Summer Intern" places a recognizable social type within the charged, contemplative space that Lyons creates, asking us to look more carefully at a figure we might otherwise overlook. And "The Starry Night" from 2020, painted on vellum, enters into dialogue with one of the most beloved images in Western art not to parody it but to find something new inside its familiar forms. These are not casual titles.

They indicate a painter who thinks in narrative and cultural layers simultaneously. For collectors, Lyons represents a compelling proposition at a particular moment in the market for expressive figurative painting. The past decade has seen sustained and serious collector interest in painters who work in this territory, with artists such as Cecily Brown, Lisa Yuskavage, and Tala Madani commanding significant attention at major auction houses and in institutional contexts. Lyons operates in related aesthetic territory, bringing her own distinctive combination of bold color, dynamic brushwork, and psychological intensity to subjects that resonate across a broad range of collecting sensibilities.

Karyn Lyons — The Celebration

Karyn Lyons

The Celebration, 2021

Her works in oil on vellum are especially distinctive within her output, the combination of an unconventional support with confident, expressive paint handling producing objects that reward extended looking and reward it differently over time. The market context for Lyons is one of genuine opportunity. Her auction presence at regional and specialty houses has introduced her work to collectors who respond to the directness and emotional honesty of her paintings, and there is every reason to expect that her profile will continue to grow as the broader conversation about contemporary figurative painting continues to expand. Collectors who have discovered her work speak of a quality that is difficult to quantify but immediately recognizable: these are paintings that stay with you, that occupy a corner of your imagination long after you have left the room where you encountered them.

That is not a common achievement, and it is one that the market has a consistent history of recognizing over time. Within the longer arc of art history, Lyons belongs to a lineage of painters who have refused to choose between expressionist feeling and figurative discipline, who have understood that the most powerful images are often those that hold both impulses in productive friction. One thinks of Alice Neel, whose unflinching psychological portraiture rewrote the terms of what figurative painting could accomplish, or of Jenny Saville, whose monumental approach to the figure transformed scale and surface into instruments of emotional revelation. Lyons works in a different register, more intimate in scale and more domestic in subject, but the underlying commitment to painting as a vehicle for genuine human attention places her in meaningful relation to these predecessors.

What matters most about Karyn Lyons, finally, is the quality of looking that her paintings enact and invite. In an era when images proliferate at a rate that threatens to exhaust our capacity for attention, she makes work that demands and rewards the slower, deeper kind of seeing that painting has always been capable of at its best. Her canvases and vellum panels are arguments, made in color and mark and surface, for the continued importance of that kind of attention. Collectors who live with her work find themselves looking more carefully at the world around them, which is perhaps the highest thing that can be said of any painter working today.

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