BRIGHTON SMITH
About Brighton Smith
Opening June 4, 2026, Skylark marks Skidmore Contemporary Art’s tenth solo exhibition of paintings by Brighton Smith, a contemporary artist raised in Orange County, whose recent body of works harmoniously synthesizes the California-based pictorial traditions of landscape painting and the Light and Space movement.
Smith's canvases reached a new culmination in his 2025 solo exhibition, High Speed Horizon. The resulting works hovered between photorealism and abstraction, where clouds dissolved into luminous fields of color, and horizons suggested mountains or oceans before revealing themselves as shifting formations of atmospheric ethereality. His skies became both contemporary and timelessly suspended between sensory immediacy and painterly invention.
With Skylark, Smith’s attention remains decidedly aerial. Consistent with previous bodies of work, the artist situates himself within a long art historical tradition of painters rendering atmospheric phenomena with idealized gravitas, ranging from the historically idealized blue expanses of the Italian Renaissance to 17th-century Dutch Baroque cloudscapes and the emotionally charged skies of 18th-century Romanticism. Rather than merely revisiting historical conventions, Smith reinterprets them through a contemporary lens, merging realism with expressionism. In this regard Smith consistently commits to the approach he has taken in previous bodies of work investigating subjects drawn from contemporary visual culture, and the natural world.
Earlier oeuvres such as Stacks and Bookends transformed books, fashion objects, cocktails, and luxury accessories into psychologically charged totems that explored aspiration, identity, and cultural desire. Smith’s later Flower paintings expanded this exploration into lush gardens, water lilies, tulips, and tropical blooms rendered against abstracted fields of color. After relocating to Mesa, Arizona in 2013, the desert landscape profoundly reshaped his artistic direction. Drawn to the resilience and sculptural beauty of succulents, cacti, and flowering plants, Smith began creating monumental close-up portraits of desert flora that transformed ordinary plants into immersive visual encounters. His exhibition Desert Garden captured the rhythms of seasonal desert life through luminous depictions of yucca blooms, agave, aloe vera, and night-blooming cactus, revealing both ecological specificity and emotional atmosphere.
Alongside his studio practice, Smith has maintained a longstanding commitment to arts education. He is passionate about traditional art education and teaches Academic Drawing and Painting with Great Hearts Academies. He has written and built K-12 art curricula that follow academic models of drawing education dating back to the Renaissance. In the Summer of 2022 he filmed a 10-part video series on traditional approaches to drawing education and is actively developing a second series on painting through Classical U and Classical Academic Press.
Smith was also an Adjunct Lecturer of Studio Art at Benedictine University, where he taught upper-division painting and Senior Seminar courses. He completed his MFA through the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, his BA in Studio Art and Art History from Pepperdine University, and graduated from the Visual Arts Conservatory of Orange County High School of the Arts. His work has been exhibited extensively across the United States and is held in the collection of the Frederick R. Weisman Museum of Art at Pepperdine University, as well as in numerous private collections internationally.
Through Smith's evolving investigations into objects, flora, and atmosphere, he continues to expand the possibilities of contemporary realism while remaining deeply engaged with painting's enduring traditions.
Brighton Smith: High Speed Horizon Artist's Statement
The sky has always been an inspiration to artists. The Italian Renaissance gave us pristine perfect blue skies, the artists of the Baroque blew us billowing clouds for angels to sit on, and the nineteenth century gave both picturesque and dramatic skies filled with color. Brighton Smith, ever the art history enthusiast, has taken the skies as his subject for this one-person-exhibition titled High Speed Horizon.
While Smith looks to the history of representation as a source of inspiration, his paintings explore the abstract qualities of clouds and the sky. Smith refreshes the tradition of painting skies with the digital age. Just as artists from the nineteenth century were struck by advancements in technology and the impact of industrialization on the landscape, Smith takes a similar approach by capturing images from high speed vehicles such as planes and trains and processing them through digital means. Many of the paintings are views out of plane windows.
In these paintings Smith continues to blur the line between realism and abstraction. In many ways these paintings are photorealistic and in many other ways they are poetic colorful abstractions. The nature of clouds and the way light interacts with them often gives the illusion of solid ground or a mountain range but in all reality the images depict air and moisture.
Smith’s use of color is both dramatic on the large scale and intricately subtle as you look closer. The qualities of the sky are endless and eternal, like the desert.
Brighton Smith received his MFA from the Philadelphia Academy of Fine Art in 2024. High Speed Horizon is his sixth one-person exhibition with Skidmore Contemporary Art.
January 2025
*****
Desert Garden
Brighton Smith explores the beauty of the world of succulents and cacti in this water-wise exhibition titled Desert Garden. This exhibition reflects Smith’s love of design, painting, and gardening. Each work in the show presents a close-up view of a plant that thrives in the heat, requiring little water to thrive. These plants are painted life size or in some cases larger than life size, ranging from 20” x 20” up to five feet.
In each painting, there is a sense of season and time of day. The Yucca plant flowers in early spring when the nights and mornings are still cool and crisp. In Yucca, Smith presents a contrast between the warm bright flower stalk is against the cool dark early morning spring sky. The Yucca signals the coming of the summer heat in the desert.
In the late spring, medicinal plants such as Aloe Vera and Peruvian Night Blooming Cactus bloom. In Peruvian Night Blooming Cactus, Smith depicts this giant of a cactus in full bloom backlit by a pale early morning sky. In Aloe Vera Flowers and Aloe Vera, the artist shows us two views of the plant—one in the early stages of blooming and one in the early summer when the leaves begin to turn pink from sunburn.
Desert summer brings long days with light that even the plants hide from. In Agave and Prickly Pear, Smith paints the hot light of the desert summer with a playful composition of an agave protecting its companion from the extreme heat. He takes liberties with the color to create a fun and witty romance of design and subject matter.
Lastly late summer is marked by rich deep sunsets, tequila harvesting of the agave, and a final midnight bloom of the younger plants. Smith captures this in Night Blooming with a beautiful, crisp composition of white flowers against a midnight-black background. This image is a portrait of Smith’s own Night Blooming Cactus which opens annually on September first.
Brighton Smith was born and raised in Southern California, and graduated from Pepperdine University with a BA in Art and Art History. He moved to Arizona in the summer of 2013 to take a job teaching. As a result, his studio practice has not just continued, but bloomed. He fell in love with desert flora and began drawing, photographing, and painting the many varieties of plants from the desert. Brighton lives and works in Mesa, AZ with his wife Chelsea, cat Thiebaud, and two Australian Shepherds named Stella and Matisse. This is Brighton’s fifth exhibition with Skidmore Contemporary Art.
July 2019
*****
Flowers
Brighton Smith's 2017 exhibition Flowers features just what the title promises. His two previous exhibitions at Skidmore Stacks (2015) and Bookends (2016) presented representations of books stacked, shelved, or as witty resting surfaces for shoes. Although flowers and books are thoroughly different in shape, color, purpose, and connotation, Smith's flowers and books similarly function in their motive: they both call upon individuality.
Smith's 2017 exhibition maintains its singular theme. It solely portrays flowers in oil on canvas. However, like Smith's books, each flower is distinguished. The series portrays a variety of flowers, each separate in their own shape, color, and size. He also depicts the subjects in different perspectives, which therefore promote distinct emotive meanings. Roses and Petals demonstrates soft and quiet colors like pale whites and calm, deep greens, while Line of Peonies utilizes louder colors like vibrant pinks and blues. Smith's Flowers have the ability to distinguish themselves, while also maintaining unity.
Although Smith's transition from books to flowers may suggest a shift in his work, Flowers continues to promote Smith's message of individuality. For each distinguished viewer, Smith offers personalized flowers which speak to you.
Mirabelle Alan
May 2017
*****
Bookends
Brighton Smith's paintings add a new twist to the traditional still life. He paints the objects of our desires. His canvases are filled with the types of things that we choose to define our lives. He paints books, fashion, cocktails. They are symbols of the good life, signs of what we want and what we have achieved.
His paintings revolve around books. Books are mass-produced but the titles we select to keep on our night stand are deeply personal choices. We are what we read. We define ourselves by the ideas we embrace and assimilate. The volumes he chooses to include run the gamut from coffee-table art books to novels, from classics of literature to mixology, from high art to fine fashion. His collections are often witty meetings of styles and cultural messages.
Smith favors things with a tinge of nostalgia. Most of his art books celebrate the era of classic modernism, when art was defined by elegant modernist abstraction and vintage Pop Art. They reflect the Golden Age of our culture. But that culture is still evolving and his subject matter also includes the latest styles and fashion trends. They capture our recollections of a better past as well as our aspirations for a more promising future.
His style is a blend of realism and expressionism. He enlivens inert objects with bold, assertive brushwork. His paint crackles with energy, making his still lifes surge and move as if they were alive. Straight edges bend slightly; geometry yields to a subjective touch. His objects seem vital and active—like something that lives deeply in our desires or memory.
This is Smith’s second one-person exhibition at Skidmore Contemporary Art. His latest series, the "Bookend" paintings, represent a growth and a variation on the previous vertical "Stacks" from 2015.
*****
Stacks
Brighton Smith’s Stacks are meditations on the deep connections in our society between art and fashion. His typical format features piles of coffee table books on the history of art, style and culture. They are usually topped by an iconic fashion statement—a high heeled shoe by a famed designer such as Jimmy Choo, Manolo Blahnik, or Christian Louboutin. The juxtapositions are witty, provocative and capture the universal appeal of fascinating art and extraordinary design.
He began painting the stacks as an evolution from his previous fashion paintings which featured groups of folded shirts and hats. Having a deep interest in art history, it was natural for him to turn to his personal library of art books. As he began to arrange his compositions he sought clever juxtapositions of subjects and themes. Some stacks are about the wide allure of a certain style or movement in culture. Others are a blend, reflecting a voracious interest in the overwhelming variety of our shared visual culture.
Smith refers to his designer shoes as “toppers.” When searching for an object to complete his stacks of books, he looked into his wife’s closet and found the perfect solution. Designer shoes are fashion's most popular—and often most expensive—accessory. While many women complain of discomfort, they still swoon over and covet the most beautiful examples by our best designers. These objects have attained a special status in our culture and often seem magically transcendent. Like the star on a Christmas tree, these iconic shoes function as a quasi-religious tribute to fashion, style, and art.
Although his imagery comes from a vast storehouse of contemporary culture, Smith adds his own personal touch and perspective. He recently said, “There is an odd contrast between where I find my sources: the brand new shiny shoes found on Rodeo Dr. or the Scottsdale Fashion Center Mall and rare, out-of-print volumes from dimly lit bookstores. Sometimes there is not a perfect book or a pair of shoes that seems to fit the idea or composition, so I invent, change color, and write new titles to make a composition work better or express more clearly the content of the grouping.”
In a way each stack functions as a personal and cultural portrait. They reflect our interests, our desires, our passions. Although the object themselves are static and inert, they are enlivened by the rich cultural associations they suggest. Beautiful as well as keenly intelligent, each stack reflects knowledge, taste and the passions of individuals in today’s society. Look closely at each stack. You will probably see yourself.