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Works
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Hunt Slonem"2", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"3 Butterflies", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Amazons Electus", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Barnaby", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Chinensis Holiday", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Chinensis Spot Light", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Daisy Chain", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Double Bunny November", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Greener Pasture", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Morning Doves", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Night Watch 4 Hutch", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Ofilia", 2024Sold
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Hunt Slonem"Pink Ascension", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Plant", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Red Finches", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Red Owl Forest", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Spring Jonquils", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Sulphurs Mid Flight", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Violets 4", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Violets", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Vision", 2024
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Hunt Slonem"Anjeligne", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Belle Terre", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Coin Silver", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Glisten Glide", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Golden Finches", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Hop Scotch Hutch", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Lucky Charm", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Mia", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Passion Double", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Purple Catelaya", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Red Clover", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Sky Lark", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Sulphurs II", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Totem", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Tulip Hedge", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Tulip Leon", 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Zoom", 2023
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Hunt SlonemViolet, 2023
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Hunt Slonem"Alba", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Amazon Pink", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Cardinals Lakeside", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Catelaya Full Bloom", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Chinensis Sonds" , 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Cross Hatch Hutch", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Emerald City" , 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Green Leaf", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Green Singers Bougainvillea", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"High Road", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Julio 18", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Lagoon", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Lavender Nape Amazon", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Lawn Party", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Light", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Magenta Ascension" , 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Mint", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Mold Score", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Monsoon Havana" , 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Morko", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Panarama Flight" , 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Pool" , 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Portrait of a Bunny", 2022Sold
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Hunt Slonem"Purple 3" , 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Skylight", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Stewart", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Sunny", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Tut", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Two Morphos", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Valejo", 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Zeze" , 2022
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Hunt Slonem"Abraham Lincoln Black & White", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Amazon Blue", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Audrey 3", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Banked Banded", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Bayou La Fouche", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Buckeye Cloak", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Diamond Dust White", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Dino", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Field", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Finches Thurs", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Flash 7", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Golden Hutch 8", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Guardian Conures Butterflies", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Hair Streak", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Hombre", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Hutch June", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Kavi", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Pixie", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Red Rover", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Roxsanne", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Sameera", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Scotty", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Summer", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Toni", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Two Chartreuse" , 2021Sold
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Hunt Slonem"Xavier", 2021
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Hunt Slonem"Adams Family", 2020
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Hunt Slonem"Chinensis August Moon", 2020
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Hunt Slonem"Fern", 2020
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Hunt Slonem"In the Pink", 2020
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Hunt Slonem"Swallow Tail", 2020
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Hunt Slonem"Ultramarine Tall Bunny", 2020
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Hunt Slonem"Little Aqua", 2019Sold
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Hunt Slonem"Untitled Red Bunny", 2018
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Hunt Slonem"Bayou Teche Albania Plantation", 2016Sold
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Hunt Slonem"Cardinals", 2011
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Biography
“In addition to my natural pantheism towards color, I find it to be the elixir of life.”
- Hunt SlonemInspired by nature and his 60 pet birds, Hunt Slonem is renowned for his neo-expressionist style. He is best known for his series of bunnies, butterflies and tropical birds, as well as his large-scale sculptures and restorations of forgotten historic homes. Slonem’s works can be found in the permanent collections of 250 museums worldwide, including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City, the Whitney, the Miro Foundation and the New Orleans Museum of Art.
Since his first solo show at the Fischbach Gallery in 1977, Slonem’s work has been showcased internationally hundreds of times, most recently at the Moscow Museum of Modern Art and the State Russian Museum in St. Petersburg. In 2017 and 2018, he will be featured by the National Museum of the Republic of Kazakhstan, the National Gallery in Bulgaria, and in countless galleries across the United States, Germany and Dubai.
His flair and admiration for far-flung destinations has been a staple of his life since childhood. Slonem was born in 1951 in Kittery, Maine, and his father’s position as a Navy officer meant the family moved often during Hunt’s formative years, including extended stays in Hawaii, California and Connecticut. He would continue to seek out travel opportunities throughout his young-adult years, studying abroad in Nicaragua and Mexico; these eye-opening experiences imbued him with an appreciation for tropical landscapes that would influence his unique style.
After graduating with a degree in painting and art history from Tulane University in New Orleans, Slonem spent several years in the early 1970s living in Manhattan. It wasn’t until Janet Fish offered him her studio for the summer of 1975 that Slonem was able to fully immerse himself in his work. His pieces began getting exhibited around New York, propelling his reputation and thrusting him into the city’s explosive contemporary arts scene. He received several prestigious grants, including from Montreal’s Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Cultural Counsel Foundation’s Artist Project, for which he painted an 80-foot mural of the World Trade Center in the late 1970s. He also received an introduction to the Marlborough Gallery, which would represent him for 18 years.
As Slonem honed his aesthetic, his work began appearing in unique, contextual spaces. By 1995 he finished a massive six-by-86-foot mural of birds, which shoots across the walls of the Bryant Park Grill Restaurant in New York City. His charity work has resulted dozens of partnerships, including a wallpaper of his famous bunnies designed specifically with Lee Jofa for the Ronald McDonald House in Long Island.
Slonem continues to draw great inspiration from history, forging palpable connections to the past through his art. His popular portraits of Abraham Lincoln reframe the historic figure as a pop-art icon, and he is currently working on a nine-foot-tall bronze sculpture of French explorer Robert De La Salle, to be displayed publicly in Louisiana.
Yet Slonem’s most ambitious project has been his mission to save America’s often forgotten historic buildings. Realizing too many of the country’s architectural gems have fallen into disrepair, Slonem has found himself drawn to these national landmarks, inspired by the depth of their age and old-world beauty. Among his accomplishments are the restorations of Cordt’s Mansion in Kingston, New York; the Lakeside and Albania plantations of Louisiana; and the Scranton Armory and Charles Sumner Woolworth’s mansion in Scranton, Pennsylvania. His sixth and latest endeavor is Belle Terre, a storied property in South Kortright, New York.
Numerous books and monographs have chronicled Slonem’s art, including Bunnies (Glitterari Inc., 2014), Birds (Glitterati Inc., 2017) and Hunt Slonem: An Art Rich and Strange (Harry N. Abrams, 2002). His studios and homes have been profiled in such books as When Art Meets Design (Assouline Publishing, 2014) and Pleasure Palaces: The Art and Homes of Hunt Slonem (powerHouse Books, 2007), among others. His latest is Gatekeeper: World of Folly (Assouline, 2018), showcasing his reclamation of the Scranton Armory, and its transition “from arms to art.”
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Exhibitions
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