KEVIN BAKER Paintings
Upcoming Exhibition
Jan.14th Iceland Greenland
Available Purple Heart

Available Masquerade

Not Available The Rise

Available Blue Moon  

Available Scyphomedusae

Available Apple Control Nature

Available Tippy's Trippy

Not Available Kevin Baker Salton Sea

Not Available Salty Sweet Roses

Available Kevin Baker
Portrait by Kevin Sinclair 
for Vestal Magazine
www.vestalmag.com  radar Xfish

Available Hearts-a-bustin

Available Fishnets

Not Available Fishnets detail Earth Father

Available Go Fish (detail) Go Fish

Not Available Hungry Heart

Not Available 'Heart for the Homeless"  
11" x 14"

Not available "Blue #2"  37.5 x 57.5 detail "Blue #2" Peacock Water Wall Kevin Baker

Golden Leaf
sold

Purple Haze "Cherokee"  Passion Fruit Saline Untitled      "Love You" Detail  "Love You" Party in My Plants "Dancing with Helen" 40" x 40",    "The Current"  12" x 12"   Sold to Patrick Toolan "  ", 12" x 12" "The Diver"  

24" x 36"  
Available "Lugano", 36" x 48" "The Canals of Venice"  24" x 24" "Stuffed Rooster"  21" x 29"  "Fish"  24" x 24"  "Blue Ice"  
40" x 40"  
Available "Grand Canal"  40" x 60"  "Carmen Miranda"  11" x 14"  "Zen"  36" x 48"  "Lost and Found"  30" x 45"    Collaboration with Donald Baechler "Miss Baker"  22.5" x 26.5"  "Hibiscus"  40" x 40"  "Celebration"  24" x 24"  "Saline"  40" x 40"  "The Parade  24"x24"  "Malone"  40" x 40"  "Blue" 30" x 45" Detail "Blue" "La Fiesta"  24" x 24"  "Cascade"  36" x 48"  "Pink Tide" 11" x 14"  "Golden Shower"  20" x 16"  "Brookside" 40" x 40"  "Amanti"  40" x 40"
Kevin Baker was born and raised in Central City, Kentucky, a coal mining community in western Kentucky. Creating art, 12 years studying classical violin, and a constant obsession with hunting and growing native plants were his main inspirations. His mother was a floral painter and stained glass artist who would often paint on top of floral wallpaper on the walls of their home. The home was decorated in pastel floral motifs, natural woods, and sparkling stained glass windows. Everything was handmade by his mother, and there is no doubt she was a great influence on his creativity.

Now living and working in New York City, Kevin is still obsessed with the beauty of flowers, and finds that he has been largely influenced by kitsch and decorative arts. He remembers his grandmother using oilcloth on everything. The shiny floral patterns and plaids covered her outdoor furniture and was always covering her dining room table. Low-brow materials interest Kevin because they can be seen as stylish in certain regions, yet in a large city such as New York they would not be an option for a decor.
In Kevin's paintings, floral oilcloths are transformed into playful environments full of air and movement. Each flower or plant life he has recreated comes alive and floats in a foggy organic atmosphere where little gravity exists. It is as if the world was flooded, or that you are viewing the bottom of the deepest waters where only your imagination can venture. You can see flower particles that have remained visible from the original oilcloth pattern, but he transforms them with many small dots. These dots are bead like and make the flowers seem as if they are floating in water, caught in currents, and drifting within swirling, almost musical rhythms along the slick surface. Through glazing and layers of drawing and painting, it is often difficult to see how the oilcloth existed before it was painted. The edges of the canvas often remain untouched giving the viewer an idea of the painting's history.

There is certainly an air of happiness and celebration in Kevin’s paintings. He would like his viewers to escape and imagine existing in another world. From his travels around the world, he finds much of his inspiration. He says the deep colorful lakes and open air in Italy have been a great source for color and plant life found in his paintings.