-
Overview
A man who excels in creating new things is the one who is good at dreaming when not sleeping.
Donald Sultan, born on June 19, 1951, in Asheville, North Carolina, is an American contemporary artist celebrated for his contributions to painting, drawing, and printmaking. Having pursued art studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and obtaining a Master of Fine Arts from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Sultan rose to prominence in the 1980s. Aligned with the New Image Painting movement, his work seamlessly merges abstraction and representation, often featuring bold shapes and a restricted color palette. His artistic repertoire includes notable series like the "Disaster Paintings," depicting industrial and natural calamities, and the "Fruit and Flower" series, which showcases his distinctive take on everyday objects. Sultan is recognized for his innovative use of materials such as tar, enamel, and Masonite, contributing to the textured quality of his pieces. His career boasts extensive exhibitions globally, encompassing solo and group showcases in major museums and galleries. Noteworthy for his unconventional approach, Sultan's art is found in numerous public and private collections. -
-
Series
Donald Sultan
Blue Wall Poppy, Oct 15, 2024Shaped aluminum with acrylic polyurethane paint and black flock
34 x 36 inches (86 x 91 cm)
Edition of 30Donald Sultan’s works are a striking fusion of industrial strength and natural beauty. Known for his bold use of materials such as tar, rubber, vinyl, enamel, and steel, Sultan transforms...Donald Sultan’s works are a striking fusion of industrial strength and natural beauty. Known for his bold use of materials such as tar, rubber, vinyl, enamel, and steel, Sultan transforms everyday subjects—flowers, fruit, dominos, and architectural forms—into powerful meditations on time, transformation, and resilience.
His imagery is rooted in the tradition of still life, yet radically reimagined. Large, simplified silhouettes of poppies, lemons, pears, or playing cards emerge from deep black grounds or vibrant color fields, creating compositions that feel both monumental and serene. Sultan’s handling of form is deliberate and architectural: petals and fruit become geometric, weighty shapes, while negative space takes on as much importance as the figures themselves.
Across his paintings, prints, and cutouts, Sultan explores the tension between fragility and permanence. His use of industrial materials—tar layered over Masonite, aluminum cut into floral outlines—contrasts with the organic delicacy of his subjects. This interplay gives his work an unmistakable duality: they are at once elegant and imposing, tender and unyielding.
Sultan’s prints and cutouts extend his painterly ideas into new dimensions. In his prints, textured inks and embossing create surfaces that are tactile and sculptural, while his aluminum cutouts lift familiar motifs off the wall, casting shifting shadows that change with the light. Together, they evoke the cyclical nature of growth and decay, permanence and impermanence—echoing the rhythms of the natural world.
Whether depicting a single flower or an industrial landscape, Donald Sultan’s works invite contemplation. They are meditations on contrast: beauty found in darkness, softness born from strength, and the quiet endurance of nature within an increasingly manmade world.
News

