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Andy Dixon Wants to Talk about Art’s Last Taboo: The Price Tag

His paintings are luxury objects about luxury. Yes, you’ll want to buy one.

Andy Dixon Wants to Talk about Art’s Last Taboo: The Price Tag
Alec Kugler

Take a look at Andy Dixon’s paintings, and it’s clear that while having a lot of fun (the bright pink! the glaring logos! the rambunctious subject matter!), the artist is also clearly making a point. The Vancouver-born-and-bred artist (he splits his time between his hometown and New York and is soon making the move to Los Angeles) started his career, as a teen no less, as a successful punk musician. Now he paints subjects that reflect on the bourgeois lifestyle—lavish interiors, knock-off Chanel and Versace clothing, neon simulacra of Old Masters, polo matches—in washes of bright colors. His raison d’être? To examine the aesthetics of value and what we deem to be expensive, including the luxury objects he’s making himself: his paintings.

We visited Dixon in his Vancouver studio, where he greeted us in a signature pastel suit (a version of which he wears every day), and talked to him about how he landed on a Nike sweatsuit as his painting uniform of choice, why he thinks Gucci’s Alessandro Michele is a genius, and how his patron, Charlotte Dellal, is helping him with his latest project.


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“There’s a motif I’m working within. If anything, I can’t make my paintings fast enough for the ideas that I have. I think that the motif of money and luxury is an endless source. A new series I just started—I showed my first work in New York at Volta—is I’m now painting my patrons’ homes. This is an interior of Charlotte Olympia’s house, actually. She bought a painting, and this is her living room with my painting in it. I’m not only making a duplicate of my own painting, but it’s also about the lifestyle of the patron. With every artist in history, there were a few people that kept them alive. There was that Russian guy that bought every Matisse painting ever—without him, Matisse wouldn’t have lived. Artists owe a lot more to patrons than they want to talk about, and I want to flip that. I want to make it about the sale. I also like the process of working with the patron—I need several different photos. They have a hand in producing the painting.”

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