Shifting Landscapes 

2024

A man with a yellow-striped scarf stands at a table with bottles, a phone, and a charger, wearing a white shirt and brown pants.

Salman Toor: My name is Salman Toor and I'm from Pakistan. I am a figurative painter. 

I like to make paintings that are sort of inspired by art history, a little bit of autobiography. And I consider these to be paintings of fantasies about me and my friends and my daily life. It straddles the themes of queer culture and immigration, and often, I guess the way that I would describe my painting is that the protagonists of the painting kind of move between being brown men in the U.S. and also queer boys. 

The paintings also move between being fantasies of free space and, kind of more constricted innner spaces that people inhabit when maybe they're crossing national borders and they’re forced to maybe reckon with a reduction of what their identity might mean, to a gatekeeper who might have to decide whether these individuals should be allowed to cross or not. 

And in the immigration pictures, it is a reflected idea of self, like a self-portrait reflected through someone else's eyes. Maybe trying to see myself and people from my own community who might be, have an encounter at immigration. And I think that that encounter doesn't really end when it happens. 


Salman Toor, Man with Face Creams and Phone Plug, 2019. Oil on canvas, 43 × 35 3/4 in. (109.2 × 90.8 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; purchase with funds from the Painting and Sculpture Committee 2020.121. © Salman Toor

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