Shaina McCoy

Shaina McCoy Paints Memory Into Radiant Being

By the editors at The Collection·April 21, 2026

Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial

Something is shifting in contemporary American painting, and Shaina McCoy sits at the center of that shift. Her richly layered oil canvases have moved steadily from gallery walls to auction houses to the walls of serious collectors, earning her a place in conversations about the most vital figurative painters working today. With works spanning from her early breakout pieces in 2017 through her most recent 2023 paintings, McCoy has built a body of work that feels at once deeply personal and unmistakably communal, a rare combination that collectors and curators alike have begun to recognize as the hallmark of an artist operating at full power. McCoy grew up immersed in the textures and rhythms of Black American life, and those formative experiences have never left her canvases.

Shaina McCoy — Smooches

Shaina McCoy

Smooches, 2023

The cultural specificity of her upbringing, the intimate rituals of hair care, the tenderness of family bonds, the particular joy of adornment, infuses every composition she creates. Rather than treating these subjects as sociological documents, she elevates them into the register of painting's highest traditions, situating Black feminine experience within a lineage that stretches from the Old Masters through the Harlem Renaissance and into the present. That ambition, worn lightly but felt deeply, is what separates her from painters who merely observe their subjects from what she does, which is to love them into existence on the canvas. Her artistic development shows a painter who arrived with strong instincts and then refined them with increasing confidence.

Her early 2017 works, including the quietly powerful "Stuntin' Like My Daddy" and the intimate "Baby Self Portrait I," already announced a distinctive vision: bold, expressive brushwork layered over decorative patterns, figures grounded in psychological presence rather than idealization. By 2018, with "Baubles, Barrettes and Beads," she expanded her material vocabulary, incorporating lace directly into the oil on canvas surface, a move that was both formally inventive and thematically resonant. The lace functions not merely as texture but as cultural artifact, evoking the handmade, the inherited, the passed down. The works from 2019 through 2021 show McCoy deepening her command of color and composition.

Shaina McCoy — Smile

Shaina McCoy

Smile, 2020

"Who I Do It For" from 2019 and "Butters" from 2021 demonstrate a painter growing more assured in her use of vibrant, layered palettes that draw from personal memory and collective cultural symbolism simultaneously. The figures in these paintings occupy their pictorial space with an ease and authority that mirrors the authority McCoy herself was finding as a painter. By the time "Smile" arrived in 2020, she had fully synthesized her influences into something that belonged entirely to her. And in 2023, "Smooches" confirmed that her evolution had not plateaued but was still very much in motion, the brushwork looser and more joyful, the emotional warmth of the image almost tactile.

For collectors, what makes McCoy's work so compelling is precisely the way it operates on multiple registers at once. The canvases are formally satisfying as paintings, rewarding close looking with the discovery of layered mark making, unexpected color relationships, and the kind of painterly decisions that reveal a genuine intelligence at work. But they also carry an emotional directness that makes them livable, the quality that separates art that looks good in a collection from art that actually means something to the people who live with it. The prints published by Simchowitz Gallery in Los Angeles, including the signed and numbered edition of "Troy Lee," have introduced her work to a broader collecting audience and represent an accessible entry point for those encountering her practice for the first time.

Shaina McCoy — Baby Self Portrait I

Shaina McCoy

Baby Self Portrait I, 2017

McCoy belongs to a generation of Black American painters who have fundamentally expanded the possibilities of figurative painting in the twenty first century. Her work enters into natural dialogue with artists such as Jordan Casteel, Tschabalala Self, and Mickalene Thomas, painters who have each found ways to place Black feminine and Black everyday experience at the center of serious artistic inquiry. Like Thomas, McCoy is drawn to the decorative as a source of meaning rather than mere embellishment. Like Self, she is interested in the construction of identity through material and image.

And like Casteel, she brings a portraitist's attentiveness to the inner life of her subjects. Within this constellation, McCoy's voice remains distinctly her own, warmer perhaps, more rooted in the specific textures of intimate domestic and personal life. What McCoy has built over less than a decade of serious exhibition is something that many painters spend entire careers reaching toward: a coherent, emotionally legible body of work that grows richer the more time you spend with it. Her paintings function as a form of cultural memory work, holding space for experiences and images that mainstream art history has too often overlooked or marginalized.

Shaina McCoy — Butters

Shaina McCoy

Butters, 2021

But they do this without grievance or didacticism. Instead they operate through the grammar of beauty and tenderness, trusting that to paint something with love is itself a political and aesthetic act of the highest order. For collectors who want to understand where American painting is going, and to own a piece of that future, Shaina McCoy is an artist whose moment has decisively arrived.

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