
Jameson Green
Adam
- ArtistJameson Green
DUSTIN YELLIN The message is the medium
Painterly memory
Jameson Green works within a space where art history feels active rather than fixed. Born in Connecticut and based in New York, he draws from a lineage that includes Vincent van Gogh, Pablo Picasso, and Francis Bacon, yet his paintings resist direct quotation. Instead, they operate through tension, where figuration is unstable and images seem to emerge and dissolve at once.
His canvases often feel like scenes remembered rather than observed, shaped through gesture, layering, and erasure. Bodies appear mid transformation, carrying a sense of psychological weight that exceeds narrative clarity.
Adam
In Adam, Green revisits one of the most familiar archetypes in Western imagery and unsettles it. The figure is no longer a fixed origin but something fragmented and shifting, caught between exposure and force.
Rendered through a mix of oil, charcoal, pastel, and acrylic, the painting emphasizes process as much as image. The body is stretched, compressed, and reassembled, suggesting that identity itself is unstable. Here, Adam is less a biblical character and more a testing ground for how meaning survives distortion.

Painting as inheritance
Green treats painting as a continuous rewriting of images, where influence moves rather than settles. His work suggests that visual memory is something to be reworked, not preserved.
This approach extends into his current presentation Fishing for the Moon in a Well at Sorry We’re Closed in Belgium, where new works continue this dialogue between past and present. Across the exhibition and in Adam, painting becomes both archive and invention, a place where inherited forms are unsettled and made to speak again.