Holly Roberts One Painting at a Time
30+ years of paintings, talked about one painting at a time: what went into the paintings, what I was trying to say, what was happening at the time of my life that I made the paintings. The paintings themselves are narrative, and this adds a little more to the story that they tell.
Monday, April 27, 2026
Albuquerque Museum of Art, permanent collection
Monday, March 30, 2026
Leaving 2026
Over the last two years, many of my images have involved splitting the figures in the frame. I am now asking the paint to play as vital a role in defining the finished image as the photo, or the parts of the collage that aren’t paint, like the eyes here, or the black cloud. The painted part of the piece is telling a part of the story that is unfolding. In this case, the story is about two people who are splitting up—a couple, friends, family, whenever two people who have been closely bonded break up—and the paint moves our eyes across the split, as well as the black paint flowing down the woman’s face, representing tears. I see the figure on the left being female, and the figure on the right being male, and both are terribly sad.
Saturday, February 21, 2026
Mouse House 2026
Saturday, January 31, 2026
Hungry 2009
Original
Saturday, December 13, 2025
Crow with Spots 2025
One of the things I teach when I do mixed media workshops is how to do transfers--meaning taking something from one place--a photo, paint, graphite, marker, text, magazine images--and transferring it to another surface. Over the years, mostly serendipitously, I've learned many ways to do these transfers. When I first started doing transfers it was possible to take an inkjet transparency, print it out in your ink jet printer, apply a little polymer medium, smack it down on your substrate, and viola--it transferred. However, in this time of rapidly changing everything, it stopped working. The formula changed, and we had to go to laser printers to do our very difficult, fingerprint removing process of doing a transfer. Things changed again, other ways to do transfers developed, and as soon as I would teach one class a transfer process, the materials would disappear or nothing would work quite right. Mostly recently I discovered, by accident, that Hammermill made a lovely double sided glossy paper for laser printers, and these prints transferred like a house afire. It was quite wonderful, but short lived. When I went to Amazon to order the paper, it turned out that now you could only order 2400 sheets at a time if you wanted that specific paper. I ended up ordering a strange Koala Pearl glossy paper, and that's what I did Crow with Spots with.
Thursday, October 30, 2025
Angry Rabbit 2025
”Angry Rabbit” is a “clean up” painting. My studio, after several weeks of working, was pretty much a wreck. Once you really start working, it’s just hard to stop to put things away. Opened boxes of photo paper, the floored littered with scraps of paper, images that had been cut up and discarded, painted panels, folders of photos, stacks of painted paper and on and on. Finally, with all the chaos, it was time to clean up. But that never happens. For the next week I found myself making image after image, almost effortlessly—anything to keep from cleaning up.






