{"id":266034,"date":"2025-10-29T10:29:19","date_gmt":"2025-10-29T14:29:19","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/?post_type=id_news&p=266034"},"modified":"2025-10-29T10:29:21","modified_gmt":"2025-10-29T14:29:21","slug":"10-questions-with-artist-anne-buckwalter","status":"publish","type":"id_news","link":"https:\/\/interiordesign.net\/designwire\/10-questions-with-artist-anne-buckwalter\/","title":{"rendered":"10 Questions With\u2026 Artist Anne Buckwalter"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
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Anne Buckwalter\u2019s Living Room with Antique Chairs and Ana\u00efs Nin Rug<\/em>, 2025, 30x 30 inch gouache on panel. Photography by Justin Craun\/courtesy of the artist and Uffner & Liu.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n
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October 29, 2025<\/p>\n\n\n

10 Questions With\u2026 Artist Anne Buckwalter<\/h1>\n\n\n
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Artist Anne Buckwalter<\/a>\u2019s practice is inspired by folk art traditions, and her paintings include domestic objects such as quilts, ceramics, and farm animals. But her work is not tame; it often integrates \u201cthe erotic with the mundane.\u201d A painting of a laundry room seems to document chores, but closer inspection reveals a pair of leather sex toys hanging with the laundry. Bedroom scenes show patterned quilts and pastel wallpaper\u2014as well as naked bodies engaged in sexual acts. She explains the layered approach as her process making room for complexity and honoring questions about \u201cthe body, femininity, and desire.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Since earning an MFA from Maine College of Art in 2012, Buckwalter has built a thriving career. She\u2019s won several awards, including a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, been included in residencies at the Vermont Studio Center, Mass MoCA, and elsewhere, and mounted numerous solo and group shows. She is represented by Uffner & Liu (New York), Pentimenti Gallery (Philadelphia), Micki Meng (San Francisco), and Rebecca Camacho Presents (San Francisco).<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Over two dozen of the artist\u2019s paintings are on view at Uffner & Liu<\/a> in New York until November 1, 2025. Anne Buckwalter: Lover\u2019s Knot <\/em>is the artist\u2019s third solo exhibition at the gallery, which is located at 170 Suffolk Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. And Buckwalter\u2019s work was also recently on display in her home state of Maine, in a solo show at the Farnsworth Art Museum, which was on view through September 21, 2025. The exhibition, Manors | Momentum,<\/em> presents new paintings and two site-specific murals. It was her first institutional solo show; she has had a dozen solo exhibitions at gallery spaces.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Interior Design<\/em> spoke with the artist about these two exhibitions, her inspirations and process, and upcoming work.<\/p>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n

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Anne Buckwalter. Photography by Lyla Duey.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n

How Anne Buckwalter Integrates The Erotic With The Mundane<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
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Buckwalter\u2019s exhibition, Manors | Momentum<\/em> at the Farnsworth Art Museum in Rockland, Maine. Photography courtesy of Anne Buckwalter.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

Interior Design: Your work is inspired by interior home scenes and the folk art tradition. How did this interest begin?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

Anne Buckwalter: I have always been a homebody. I love being at home and homemaking. The kind of art I was first introduced to as a child was Pennsylvania Dutch folk art, which includes a lot of domestic crafts, like painted furniture, quilts and textiles, whimsical dishes, duck decoys, drawings of farm and family life. I grew up around a lot of beautiful yet simple objects, utilitarian and beloved. I\u2019m a rather nostalgic person and have always felt incredibly attached to the spaces I\u2019ve lived in, so it makes a lot of sense to me that I\u2019m drawn to painting interiors. Even when my subject matter has deviated from domestic space, I have always been interested in psychological interiority\u2014how we allow things, especially conflicting things, to live together in our minds.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

ID: Do you inhabit related interior spaces at any point in the process or include Pennsylvania Dutch objects in your personal studio space?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB: The interiors in my paintings are inventions, but they are informed by my past and present. I see them as psychological spaces. My home now is quite reminiscent of the domestic spaces in my work. I have a lot of objects in my house in Maine, which is where my studio is, that are family heirlooms, as well as objects I\u2019ve acquired because they remind me of my childhood home. So, I\u2019d say my home has a significant Pennsylvania Dutch aesthetic. But, just like the interiors in my paintings, this sort of old-fashioned country aesthetic is threaded together with things I own that speak to my interest in human sexuality and eroticism. I have a lot of erotic art, books, and objects, and those things are playfully displayed amongst antiques and collectibles that feel like they could have come from a turn-of-the-century farmhouse. For example, I have a framed print of a photograph taken by a friend at an S&M club hanging above a couple of old porcelain chicken lamps, which were given to my partner by his grandmother. I like contradiction, and I like unexpected pairings. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

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The green patterned wall gives Buckwalter’s exhibit at the Farnsworth Art Museum a naturalistic feel. Photography courtesy of Anne Buckwalter.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

ID: How do themes of human sexuality show up in your work?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB: I am really fascinated by sexuality; I think it\u2019s the primary frontier of human creativity and imagination. So it\u2019s a big part of my work, though I like to include erotic elements in my paintings that are subtle or kind of hiding in plain sight. Figures are often obscured, and objects that allude to sex or the body are interspersed with commonplace, mundane ones. To me, this is about normalizing sex as part of everyday life. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

Personally, I think that our social problems of oppression\u2014 classism, racism, misogyny, queer and transphobia, ageism, ableism\u2014they are all enmeshed with one another, and they all stem from repression of the body. Sex requires us to think about the fact that we have bodies, and when we think about the fact that we have bodies, we must consider the fact that those bodies are temporary. Sexuality is really inextricably contingent with mortality, and Americans can\u2019t seem to talk about either one. Ours is a culture so obsessed with control and allergic to failure, and we have a hard time accepting our bodies\u2019 appetites and inevitable failures. If we could heal the cultural problem of sexual repression, I suspect a lot of other kinds of healing would follow.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

ID: The solo show at Farnsworth Art Museum was in your home state of Maine. Does that feel meaningful and what work was on view?\u00a0<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB: It\u2019s incredibly meaningful. I love Maine, for the reasons that it\u2019s easy to live here and the reasons that it\u2019s challenging. One of the best things about Maine is its close-knit community of artists. Perhaps because living here year-round can be quite an isolating experience, the artists who live and work here do a great job of getting to know each other and cheering each other on. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

I made 25 new paintings for my show at the Farnsworth, including my largest painting to date, and I worked with curator Jaime DeSimone and a team of muralists to create two site-specific murals as part of the show. The work was inspired by my visits to a number of women-owned historic homesteads in New England, originating from and including the Lucy Farnsworth homestead, which is part of the museum\u2019s collection. There\u2019s a lot of Victorian-era imagery and patterning in these paintings that serve as a kind of backdrop upon which erotic and queer narratives are situated.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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Many of Buckwalter’s paintings are on view here in this exhibit at the Farnsworth Art Museum. Photography courtesy of Anne Buckwalter.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

ID: What is included in your solo show at Uffner & Liu, which opened September 5 and is up through November 1, 2025?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB:  The paintings in my upcoming show with Uffner & Liu, called Lover\u2019s Knot <\/em>(after the name of a quilt pattern), are more focused on rural life, which comes from my present-day life in Maine as well as the rural area I grew up in in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. The paintings in the Farnsworth put a lot of perceived distance between the viewer and the painting, whereas the works in Lover\u2019s Knot <\/em>are more zoomed-in; some are more like still life paintings, focused more closely on objects and material histories. There\u2019s also a series of works on paper in this new show that are quilt studies, and they are quite geometric, so that\u2019s a very new way of working for me. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

ID: What aspects of interior design, furniture design, textile design, and\/or visual culture continue to interest you in your practice, but do not show up within your work?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB: I\u2019m very drawn to the visual culture of Scandinavia. My partner and I took a trip to Denmark and Sweden several years ago, before the pandemic, and I was swooning the entire trip, particularly in Danish furniture shops. There\u2019s something about the intensely structured, efficient nature of that design sensibility that I find so comforting. I think it\u2019s because I\u2019m a terribly orderly person\u2014clutter deeply troubles me\u2014and I imagine it would be difficult to lose things in a Scandinavian home. And some of my favorite painters are Swedish; I\u2019m thinking in particular of Jockum Nordstrom and Mamma Andersson\u2026 there\u2019s a kind of austerity coupled with a sexual frankness in their work that I just love.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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Anne Buckwalter\u2019s Better Half<\/em>, 2025, 18 x 18 inch gouache on panel. Photography by Justin Craun\/courtesy of the artist and Uffner & Liu. <\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

ID: What\u2019s your process like to make a single artwork?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB: I start with a simple drawing. I have a notebook where I make little thumbnail sketches of compositions; they are very rough, just quick decisions about where I want a couch, a cupboard, a framed painting, that kind of thing. And then I will transpose the thumbnail onto a larger panel that I\u2019ve primed with gesso and sanded, and I\u2019ll improvise the drawing from there. Sometimes I will have in mind a focal point that serves as a kind of anchor of the painting, but a lot of the painting will be a mystery to me at the beginning, and I\u2019ll figure it out as I go along. I always want to leave room for myself to be surprised by what happens on the panel, so the painting can tell me what to do.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

ID: Your practice includes creative writing, both fiction and poetry. Can you tell us a bit about the links between that and your visual work?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB: \u00a0I see them as siblings. Writing and painting are very different processes, and they light up different parts of my brain, so I think they inform each other even when there isn\u2019t a narrative link between the two. I find writing so much more challenging than painting, because with words, there isn\u2019t the same kind of allowance for vagueness and ambiguity that you can get with images. Words are so specific. Or at least, I haven\u2019t figured out how to write in this way\u2014I\u2019m bewildered and delighted by writers who can.\u00a0<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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Anne Buckwalter\u2019s Living Room with Antique Chairs and Ana\u00efs Nin Rug<\/em>, 2025, 30x 30 inch gouache on panel. Photography by Justin Craun\/courtesy of the artist and Uffner & Liu.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n

ID: What kind of spaces do you most appreciate seeing your work displayed in?<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB: I appreciate seeing my paintings anywhere outside of my studio, honestly!  It\u2019s very special to me when someone wants to have one of my paintings in their home, because home is such an intimate space, and my work is so personal. So the idea that someone could see something in a painting I made that they want to live with day to day\u2026 it feels connective. It\u2019s like they\u2019ve invited me over for dinner and we\u2019ve shared some secrets. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

ID: What\u2019s next for you and\/or what would be your wildest dream for that?\u00a0<\/h3>\n\n\n\n

AB: My wildest dream was always to be a full-time artist, and it still is, even though I\u2019m living inside that dream. Every morning when I go into my studio, I feel overwhelmed with gratitude to be there, and I know how fortunate I am. I have a solo show coming up this spring in Berlin with the gallery Haverkampf Leistenschneider, and I am also planning a project with the Allentown Art Museum later in 2026.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

I\u2019m hoping to cultivate more opportunities to work with museums and cultural institutions, and I would really like to collaborate with organizations invested in LGBTQ+ justice and sexual liberation work. I love seeing my work made accessible to an expansive audience. I think looking at art is medicine, and everyone deserves medicine.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

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The pink wall is a pleasant surprise to visitors walking around the exhibit at the Farnsworth Art Museum. Photography courtesy of Anne Buckwalter.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n\n\n\n
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Anne Buckwalter\u2019s Precarious Arrangement<\/em>, 2025, 30x 24 inch gouache on panel. Photography by Justin Craun\/courtesy of the artist and Uffner & Liu.<\/figcaption><\/figure>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n\n\n\n