Peter Doig and the work series that shaped contemporary painting
Veröffentlicht: 27.06.2026 um 22:22 Uhr, Redaktion AD HOC NEWS, Redaktionelle Verantwortung: Rafael Müller (Chefredaktion)Peter Doig stands among the most influential painters of his generation, known for large-scale canvases that combine memory, film and art history in dense, atmospheric scenes. His serial treatment of motifs such as canoeing figures, tropical houses and snow-covered landscapes has become a key reference point for contemporary painting.
Serial imagery and landmark works
Many of Peter Doig's best known paintings arise from clusters of related images, where a single photographic source or remembered scene is reworked multiple times with shifting palettes, cropping and spatial emphasis. This serial approach gives his practice a distinctive rhythm that collectors and institutions follow closely.
Works associated with the canoe motif, including the painting White Canoe, exemplify this strategy by revisiting a lone boat on still water under changing light conditions and compositional angles. The repetition alters the psychological temperature of the image, moving from quiet contemplation to latent unease while retaining the same basic structure.
The retrospective lens on Peter Doig
Retrospective presentations of Peter Doig's work typically organize these series into thematic clusters, allowing viewers to track the evolution of specific motifs across decades. Curators often juxtapose early snow scenes with later Caribbean imagery to highlight the artist's mobility between climatic and cultural zones.
Exhibition narratives frequently emphasize how Doig's painting draws on personal experience, cinema and existing artworks without settling into direct quotation. The series structure supports this by letting a single source image act as a flexible armature rather than a fixed reference, open to experimentation over time.
Exhibitions, auctions and background on Peter Doig
For additional reporting on Peter Doig, including past exhibitions and market coverage, the AD HOC NEWS archive offers further context on his position in contemporary painting.
The core of Doig's practice
Peter Doig works primarily in painting, often on canvases of considerable scale that immerse the viewer in landscapes saturated with color, pattern and spatial ambiguity. His surfaces carry traces of layered application, scraping and reworking, reflecting a process that unfolds over extended periods.
Where the artist stands now
Peter Doig continues to develop and expand his major work groups in painting, with new variations on established motifs appearing in recent years alongside fresh subjects that extend his exploration of memory and landscape.
Key facts on Peter Doig
- Artist: Peter Doig
- Medium / Genre: Painting (figurative and landscape)
- Born: 1959, Edinburgh, United Kingdom
- Place(s) of practice: Studios in Trinidad and London
- Active since: Late 1980s, with wider recognition from the early 1990s
- Key work groups: Canoe paintings, snow landscapes, tropical houses, sea and coastal scenes
- Current/last exhibition: Peter Doig, Fondation Beyeler, Riehen/Basel, February 4 – June 25, 2023
- Major collections: Tate (London), British Museum (London), National Gallery of Canada (Ottawa), Kunsthaus Zürich (Zurich)
- Awards: John Moores Painting Prize, 1993; Wolfgang Hahn Prize, 2008
- Next date: currently no announced date in the 30-day window
Frequently asked questions about Peter Doig
Which themes recur in Peter Doig's paintings?
Peter Doig often returns to motifs such as canoes on still water, snow-covered scenes, tropical houses and coastal views, treating these themes as flexible frameworks for exploring memory, cinema and art history.
Where has Peter Doig recently been exhibited?
One of his recent major institutional presentations was the exhibition Peter Doig at Fondation Beyeler in Riehen near Basel, which ran from February 4 to June 25, 2023.
What recognition has Peter Doig received for his work?
Peter Doig received the John Moores Painting Prize in 1993, marking early recognition for his large-scale paintings, and was awarded the Wolfgang Hahn Prize in 2008, underlining his significance within European institutional collections.
This article was produced with a.i. support and editorially reviewed. All statements without guarantee; auction results, exhibition dates and awards may change at short notice.
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