Image: Sean Scully: The Parrish Museum
Installation view of Sean Scully: The Albee Barn, Montauk at the Parrish Art Museum, Water Mill, NY (May 11–September 21, 2025). Photo: © Gary Mamay
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Sean Scully: The Parrish Museum Exhibition review

13 August 2025

By Michael Klein

His program is twofold: color and structure. Mathematically simple, but his program opens the door to infinite varieties and formal possibilities. This show is the evolution of a contemporary painter now renowned. As evident from the selection of paintings on view, made to quote from the museum’s website: Sean Scully: The Albee Barn, Montauk is a survey of the artist’s work ranging from 1981 to 2024, “exploring his Long Island connection and how a single month spent in Montauk in the summer of 1982 with a fellowship at The Edward F. Albee Foundation became a pivotal place and moment in the artist’s career.”  

Moving from his urban life to a country setting had a huge impact on his thinking and work. Shifting in scale and material, Scully collected scraps of wood rather than using stretched canvas. The small works, like talisman small gems, one such work is Solomon, 1982, a simple pattern of black and white vertical stripes. In these and others of the period, Scully exploited the Minimal passion for repetition, and that passion has found its place in all of his work from the 80s until today. 

Overall, the paintings always have a distinct architectonic presence as if a wall of many colors. Vertical or horizontal bands of color, there is always internal repetition, a visual rhyme if you will, that animates the surface, capturing the viewer’s attention. He builds in sections, and sometimes these sections become layered so a grid pattern can be inserted into or over a band of colors. And while the elements of structure are explored, color becomes a means to an emotional expression, a way to capture the viewer’s heart.  

Scully today commands the same presence as the great Stellas of the Sixties; Scully paintings are large, even monumental in scale, but always a very well-balanced and harmonious scheme of color. Typical of this methodology is an early work comprised of twelve separate canvases, Backs and Fronts, 1981. It is a big statement and indicative of what is to come over the next few years, a constant interpretation of a basic scheme of color and line. 

His career, now over four decades, shows no sign of exhaustion or repetition but an ongoing investigation into this long-established vocabulary. Again, like Stella or even Robert Mangold, there is endless exploration and invention. The focus is on key geometric elements present in all the works, paintings, prints, or his pastels. A statement by the artist in his retrospective catalogue from the Philadelphia Museum of Art in 2020 underscores this working methodology: “…the only thing I could not bear to get rid of was the basic structural element - the band, line stripe, whatever. That repetitive visual structure - I really connect with very deeply.  

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