Demetrius Wilson describes painting as a living exchange—where the canvas responds, shifts, and ultimately becomes something greater than he first imagined.
In this episode, abstract painter Demetrius Wilson reflects on his second solo exhibition at Half Gallery and the evolution of a practice rooted in intuition, movement, and material dialogue. Working at the intersection of environment, memory, and abstraction, Wilson explores how color, scale, and gesture can evoke both personal and collective experience.
But this conversation goes beyond painting.
Here, Demetrius considers what it means to create in a rapidly changing world—tracing how a 1990s upbringing, spiritual inquiry, and a desire to expand visual language all shape his approach to art-making and meaning.
In this episode Demetrius shares:
- His recent exhibition Light in a Dark Mirror and why it represents his strongest body of work to date
- The idea of painting as a “symbiotic” process—where the work responds and evolves in real time
- Growing up on the East Coast in the 1990s and how that era shapes his perspective and process
- His approach to color—using heat, temperature, and contrast to evoke emotional intensity
- His relationship to spirituality and how religious ideas subtly surface in his recent work
- Key artistic influences including Ed Clark, Jack Whitten, Mark Bradford, Cecily Brown, Francis Bacon, and Jean-Michel Basquiat.
- How scale shifts perception, from expansive canvases to intimate works on paper
At its core, this conversation is about movement—between control and release, past and present, clarity and ambiguity. Through Demetrius Wilson’s reflections, painting emerges as both a physical act and a philosophical inquiry: a space where memory, environment, and emotion collide, and where abstraction becomes a language for navigating a world that is constantly in flux.
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