People Painting

Connor Dillman

Conversations with painters. Hosted by Connor Dillman.

  1. 20. Eva Dixon

    Mar 17

    20. Eva Dixon

    Artist Eva Dixon talks about the sophistication of not understanding while making, the potency of found imagery, how our culture is shaping the difference between being seen and being looked at, and more. Eva Dixon (b. 2000) is an Australian artist living in London. Dixon’s practice, spanning assemblage, sculpture and painting, explores homo-eroticism in sport and porn, the space race, lesbianism and industry. Horny reimaginings of goal celebrations and tackles play against seductive or kinky materials; aluminium sheets, walnut frames, darkroom filters, buckles, clips and leather straps. Rockets built from stolen street signs and gifted electrical spools. As a collector of things; disused industrial materials, old football and boy-mags, pins and play cards, the material is a key-research point to Dixon. Manipulating each component to spin wild and sometimes racy narratives. Advertisements seeking discreet and specific kinds of sex inform the next stages of Dixon’s practice and speak to the loss of historical artefacts in the wider LGBTQ+ community, where fictioning is a prevalent tool passed down through generations. Dixon is a graduate of Central Saint Martins, completing a BA in Fine Art (Hons) in 2023. Recent significant exhibitions include solo presentations SCORE! at Split Rivera (2025), Mercury 13 at WIP Space (2025), and Lesbian Trucker Paintings at The Fores Project (2023). Notable duo exhibitions include Lands End (2024) and the 2026 duo exhibition Top Dog at Parlour Gallery, alongside presentations at Saatchi Gallery, Christie's and Rose Easton. In 2023, they were a recipient of the Maison/0 This Earth award with LVMH and recently was awarded 'Best UK solo presentation' at Minor Attractions.  Eva’s Instagram: @evadixon.png Reference links: Merlin James Ian Kiaer Jesse Darling Gray Wielebinski Sigmar Polke W.P. Wakefield (hardware store) Phyllida Barlow Susan Sontag, Notes on “Camp” (1964) Richard Serra, Verb List (1967) Ada Lovelace Anaïs Nin, Delta of Venus (1977) Toni Morrison, Beloved (1987) Octavia E. Butler, Kindred (1979) Ursula K. Le Guin, The Dispossessed (1974) Samuel R. Delany, Babel-17 (1966) Episode cover art: “Throttle”, 2025, Polycarbonate Panelling, Screws, Stickers, Cards, Brackets, Metallic Insulation Tape, Fabric Tape and Engraving on Stretcher, 140 x 100cm Support People Painting

    49 min
  2. 19. Sebastián Espejo

    Feb 1

    19. Sebastián Espejo

    Artist Sebastián Espejo talks about observational shifts between scene and surface, how multiple temporalities accumulate in his paintings, receptiveness versus modulation in his process, and more. Sebastián Espejo (b. 1990) is a Chilean artist based in London whose practice centres on painting as a form of attention. His work explores the language of painting through close observation of the natural world, living organisms, and the perception of light. Espejo has exhibited internationally across the UK, Europe, Asia, and the Americas. He was twice a finalist for Jackson’s Art Prize and was shortlisted for the John Moores Painting Prize in 2025. In 2025, he undertook a residency at Drumlanrig Castle and was subsequently selected for the Fugger Kunsthof residency in Augsburg for 2026. He is currently preparing two solo exhibitions: one at Union Pacific, London, and another at Sun Gallery, Seoul. In January 2026, he received the Brave Project Award and will be featured in Chapter 5, alongside a solo exhibition at Interval Gallery, London, presented in dialogue with works by Pierre Bonnard. Espejo understands painting as a surface of encounter. His works often place direct references to historical artworks alongside everyday objects or observed scenes, creating a dialogue between lived experience and inherited visual languages. These dualities operate both in his approach to observation and in the process of translation onto the painted surface. Alongside his studio practice, Espejo has developed and led workshops focused on painting, attention and embodied ways of seeing, extending his artistic enquiry into shared, pedagogical contexts. Sebastián’s Instagram: @sebaespejov Reference links: Adolfo Couve, Melliza (1964) Adolfo Couve: Una lección de pintura by Claudia Campaña (2015)—see cover for painting referencedRon Padgett, Pink Dust (2025) Jim Jarmusch, Paterson (2016) Episode cover art: "Dog Star", Oil, wax, marble dust and pencil on birch wood panel, 50x40cm, 2025. Courtesy of the artist, Interval, Jessica Draper and Wildenstein & Co. Photo by Jack Elliot Edwards. Support People Painting

    43 min
  3. 17. Olivia van Kuiken

    10/14/2025

    17. Olivia van Kuiken

    Artist Olivia van Kuiken discusses intentional misdirection, how she is thinking about language through painting, engaging with the architectural element of her work, and more. This conversation is concerned primarily with the work in her recent show “Bastard Rhyme” at Matthew Brown Gallery in New York. Olivia van Kuiken (b. 1997 in Chicago, Illinois) is a New York based artist. She received a BFA in Studio Art at Cooper Union, New York, 2019. Solo Exhibitions include Losing looking leaving, Caprii, Düsseldorf (2024); Beil Lieb, Château Shatto, Los Angeles (2024); Make me Mulch!, Chapter NY, New York (2023);  She clock, me clock, we clock, King’s Leap, New York (2022). Select group exhibitions include the Lord will spit out the lukewarm, Bortolami, New York (2025); What are you looking for?, curated by Brandy Carstens, Société, Berlin (2025); Meet me by the lake, CLEARING, New York (2024); Mad Monk, Micki Meng, New York (2024); A Modern Disease, curated by Cooper Brovenick, New York (2024); Manic Pixie Nightmare Drawings, Adler Beatty, New York (2024); Anything can pass before the eyes of a person, Derosia, New York (2023); Works on Paper: 100 Years, Amanita, New York (2023); Supper Club, As it Stands, Los Angeles (2023); Oceans of Time, Château Shatto, Los Angeles (2022); Elective Affinities, Chapter NY, New York (2022); Bright lights, big city, no fun, Shoot the Lobster, New York  (2022); La Saison Creuse, Hoffman Maler Wallenburg, Nice (2022). Olivia’s Instagram: @livankuiken Reference links: Bernini, Chair of St. Peter (1657–1666) Barnett Newman, Vir Heroicus Sublimis (1950-51)Percy Bysshe Shelley, Ozymandias (1818) Tove Jansson, The Summer Book (1972) Rembrandt, Self-Portrait with Two Circles (1665-1669) Taryn Simon, Image Atlas (2012) Beyoncé, AMERICA HAS A PROBLEM (2022) Cap’n Jazz, Scary Kids Scaring Kids (1998) my bloody valentine, mbv (2013)

    47 min
  4. 15. Danny Leyland

    08/04/2025

    15. Danny Leyland

    Artist Danny Leyland talks about strategies for re-organizing paintings, working towards an archival approach to image-making, how drawing is informing his way forward, and more. Danny Leyland (b.1994) is an artist and educator from Oxford, UK, currently based in London. His practice is led by painting, but also encompasses drawing, printmaking and writing. A graduate of Edinburgh College of Art (2016), and the Royal College of Art (2024), Leyland has exhibited internationally, with highlights including RSA New Contemporaries (2017), Edinburgh Art Festival (2021), Contemporary Art Now, Ibiza (2024), and a solo presentation at Mare Karina, Venice (2025). His work is included in private and public collections, including the Royal College of Art’s special collections, and the Park Seo-Bo Foundation (Korea). Leyland was the winner of the Chadwell Award (2024), runner-up for the Jackson’s Art Prize (2024), a shortlisted artist for the Waverton Art Prize (2024), and has been a two-time awardee of the Elizabeth Greenshields Grant (2021, 2023). Leyland is the 2025-2026 Abbey Scholar at the British School in Rome. Since 2016, Leyland also works in a collaborative practice with the artist and curator Connie Hurley. Danny’s work: dannyleyland.com Danny’s Instagram: @danny_leyland Reference links: Paul Nash, Landscape of the Megaliths (1937) Daumier reviewed by Merlin James (2014) Wings of a Butterfly exhibition at Ingleby (2025) Piero della Francesca, The Baptism of Christ (1437-1445) Pierre Bonnard, Le Boxeur (portrait de l'artiste) (1931) Timothy Hyman, The New World Made (2022) Edvard Munch, Self Portrait between the Clock and the Bed (1940-43) Pierre Bonnard, The C C Land Exhibition at Tate Modern (2019) Kim Ki-duk, Spring, Summer, Fall, Winter...and Spring (2004)

    53 min
  5. 14. Scarlett Budden

    07/03/2025

    14. Scarlett Budden

    Artist Scarlett Budden talks about writing scripts for paintings, staging ideas, how she thinks about surface in relation to her subject matter, and more. Scarlett’s work explores the complexities of spectatorship and the voyeuristic exploits within both cinematic practices and the traditions of figurative painting. The female protagonist occupies theatrical yet ambiguous spaces that collapse the divide between reality and fiction. A space known only to the sitter. Close-up stills of the body are framed and disguised within illusionist portals to empower the observed to become the observer. These ghostly psychologically layered images haunt their audience. The spectator is given as a cold shoulder as the relationship between abjection and desire is questioned. Through its fragmentation, the body breaks down traditional modes of representation. Instead, the aesthetic whole of the female frame is replaced by an inner voice, as the interior and exterior fuse. The mouth recurs as a metonym for this liminal space and the body becomes a site of rupture, autonomy and agency. The work seeks to move beyond the threshold of conscious perception through the use of subliminal messaging and symbolic imagery such as fish, forests, and the ocean. All of which are symbols of the depths of the human psyche in Jungian psychology. The body is framed as morphic and escapes existing archetypes. Just as the Surrealist’s Exquisite Corpse, the self finds power in its fluctuating and indefinite state. Scarlett’s work: scarlettbudden.com Scarlett’s Instagram: @scarlettbuddenstudio

    50 min

Ratings & Reviews

5
out of 5
3 Ratings

About

Conversations with painters. Hosted by Connor Dillman.

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