This monograph is the first comprehensive survey of Nathaniel Mary Quinn's work, featuring paintings made since 2013. Quinn's images combine bodily fragments derived from sources that include both personal images and those culled from the media. Working without preliminary sketches, he forms composite images of faces and figures that resemble collages but are in fact painted and drawn. Developed with oil paint, charcoal, gouache, oil stick, and pastel, these works address the hybridity of perception and identity.
The book includes over 125 color plates of Quinn's paintings, as well as studio photographs that offer an insight into his process. An introduction from Larry Gagosian is followed by an essay by Andrew Winer which discusses his work in terms of representation, abstraction, and memory. The volume also features a conversation between the artist and Sarah Elizabeth Lewis that offers firsthand reflections on the painter's practice, as well as an essay by Dawn Ades contextualizing Quinn's work in relation to Modern and contemporary collage, painting, and portraiture.