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'''Paul Weiner''' (born July 6, 1993) is an American contemporary artist known for his paintings, sculptures, and drawings originating from topics of American symbolism, cultural hybridity, place, politics, and violence. He lives and works in Denver, Colorado and is known for disseminating his work as a public figure on social media.<ref>Wach, Alexandra. [https://www.welt.de/print/die_welt/kultur/article181464016/Rheinischer-Spieltrieb.html], ''Die Welt''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref><ref>Gracia de Pedro, Maria. [http://www.daily-lazy.com/2018/10/paul-owen-weiner-at-krupic-kersting.html], ''Daily Lazy''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref><ref>Kordic, Angie. [https://www.widewalls.ch/new-american-contemporary-44309/], ''Widewalls''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref>
'''Paul Weiner''' is an American contemporary artist known for his paintings, sculptures, and drawings originating from topics of American symbolism, cultural hybridity, place, politics, and violence.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Brown |first1=Phil |title=TRACE ELEMENTS: KIMBERLY ROWE AND PAUL WEINER |publisher=The Courier-Mail (Brisbane News) |date=21 January 2017}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Wach |first1=Alexandra |title=Rheinischer Spieltrieb |url=https://www.welt.de/print/die_welt/kultur/article181464016/Rheinischer-Spieltrieb.html |accessdate=19 December 2018 |publisher=Die Welt |date=8 September 2018}}</ref> He lives and works in Denver, Colorado.<ref>{{cite web |title=Krupic Kersting Galerie KUK: Paul Owen Weiner |url=https://www.artforum.com/artguide/krupic-kersting-galerie-kuk-10459/tbd-156405 |website=Artforum |accessdate=19 December 2018}}</ref> Weiner's works have been included in non-profit and university museums such as [[Mana Contemporary]], HF Johnson Gallery of Art at [[Carthage College]], [[Leeds Arts University]], and [[York St John University]] as well as a variety of international gallery exhibitions in Australia, Belgium, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cuderman |first1=Peter |title=30&under: Short Life Advice from Outliers Under 30 |date=21 May 2018 |publisher=CreateSpace Publishing |isbn=978-1717581495 |pages=202-205}}</ref>

==Life==
==Life==


Paul Weiner was born in [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]], Colorado in 1993 and raised in [[Aurora, Colorado|Aurora]], Colorado. Weiner graduated from [[Syracuse University]] with a [[Bachelor of Fine Arts]] degree and returned home to [[Aurora, Colorado|Aurora]]. During his time at [[Syracuse University]], Weiner began making paintings about the [[2012 Aurora Shooting|2012 Aurora theater shooting]], which were later acknowledged as his first critically appreciated series of paintings. He grew up a short distance from the site of the [[Columbine Massacre]] and, later, the [[2012 Aurora Shooting|2012 Aurora theater shooting]].<ref>Brown, Phil. "TRACE ELEMENTS" ''Brisbane News'', Brisbane, January 2017, pp. 21-22.</ref> Weiner has often referenced his own family history, especially his paternal great-grandfather who lived and sold cattle in Denver near the location of his art studio, as a frame for discussing his culturally hybrid upbringing as the progeny of Polish Jews, Germans, Irish Catholics, and Irish Protestants.<ref>Cuderman, Peter. "Paul Weiner Interview" ''30 &Under'', Scotts Valley, April 2018, pp. 202-205.</ref>
Paul Weiner was born in [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]], Colorado in 1993 and raised in [[Aurora, Colorado|Aurora]], Colorado. Weiner graduated from [[Syracuse University]] with a [[Bachelor of Fine Arts]] degree.<ref>{{cite web |title=Notable Alumni Syracuse University |url=http://vpa.syr.edu/academics/art/alumni/ |website=Syracuse University |accessdate=19 December 2018}}</ref> He grew up a short distance from the site of the [[Columbine Massacre]] and, later, the [[2012 Aurora Shooting|2012 Aurora theater shooting]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Rees |first1=Hugh |title=MEET PAUL OWEN WEINER |url=https://www.twfineart.com/blogs/tw-fineart-1/meet-paul-owen-weiner |website=TWFINEART Blog |accessdate=20 December 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Kordic |first1=Angie |title=New American Contemporary Art Presented at 44309 Gallery |url=https://www.widewalls.ch/new-american-contemporary-44309/ |website=Widewalls |accessdate=20 December 2018}}</ref>
==Career==
==Work==


Weiner is best known for his large-scale American flag monoprint paintings and his works in charcoal on canvas. These works are notable for advancing the American flag painting lineage by using the American flag as a brush and material rather than an illusionistic element or painterly symbol.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Gracia de Pedro |first1=Maria |title=Paul Owen Weiner at Krupic Kersting Cologne, Germany |url=http://www.daily-lazy.com/2018/10/paul-owen-weiner-at-krupic-kersting.html |website=Daily Lazy |accessdate=19 December 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Peck Wagner |first1=Madeleine |title=Shocking Event & UNSETTLING Art Paul Owen Weiner holds a black mirror to America |url=http://folioweekly.com/stories/shocking-event-and-unsettling-art,17957 |website=Folio Weekly |accessdate=19 December 2018}}</ref> Weiner's gestural and abstract charcoal works, which reference current events,<ref>{{cite web |last1=Anspon |first1=Catherine |title=Game Changing Houston Gallery Relaunches in River Oaks |url=https://www.papercitymag.com/arts/nancy-littlejohn-art-gallery-reopens-river-oaks-houston-game-changer/ |website=Paper City Magazine}}</ref> are created using giant willow branches and detritus from his studio. An article in ''[[Westword]]'' explains how, in his studio, "virtually every surface is covered in a layer of charcoal and paint."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Froyd |first1=Susan |title=Five Things for Art Lovers to Do and See This Weekend in Denver |url=https://www.westword.com/arts/art-openings-and-gallery-exhibits-in-denver-may-24-to-26-2018-10343124 |website=Westword |accessdate=20 December 2018}}</ref> The use of these processes was on display in the works shown at Krupic Kersting Gallery in Cologne, Germany, which received mixed reactions in critical circles.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Schumann |first1=Markus |title=Paul Owen Weiner - American Amnesia |issue=September / October 2018 |publisher=Kulturmagazin Stadtzauber |date=15 October 2018}}</ref> In a review of the 2018 exhibition highlights of the Düsseldorf Cologne Open, ''[[Die Welt]]'s'' Alexandra Wach remarked that Weiner's works are "''weniger lieblich''" or "less lovely" but that they also gave insight into the dark sensitivities of his generation regarding American politics and democracy.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Wach |first1=Alexandra |title=Rheinischer Spieltrieb |url=https://www.welt.de/print/die_welt/kultur/article181464016/Rheinischer-Spieltrieb.html |accessdate=19 December 2018 |publisher=Die Welt |date=8 September 2018}}</ref> Wach also commented on Weiner's work in [[de:Monopol (Zeitschrift)]] ''Monopol Magazin für Kunst und Leben'', where she described his American flag paintings as a "''spätromantische Ode an den Untergang''" or "a late romantic ode to the downfall."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Wach |first1=Alexandra |title=Rheinisches Galerienwochenend: Highlights der DC Open |url=https://www.monopol-magazin.de/rheinisches-galerienwochenende |website=Monopol Magazin für Kunst und Leben |accessdate=19 December 2018}}</ref>
Weiner is a public figure on social media, especially on Instagram, where he often discusses his artistic process, conceptual concerns, and experiences in the art world alongside images of his artwork in his studio and exhibition spaces. His persona often plays out online in the form of photographs in which he is seen painting and drawing inside his charcoal-filled [[Denver, Colorado|Denver]] studio. Weiner has discussed these images as site-specific artworks taking place on the internet while he relies on social media as a way of democratizing his process and critical commentary.
In a 2017 article regarding Weiner's residency at Long Road Projects in Jacksonville, ''[[Folio Weekly]]'s'' Madeleine Peck Wagner described his flag paintings as "designed to challenge viewer’s (and his own) notions of patriotism, nationalism and anxiety" and remarked that "censorship is a topic close to the artist. His earlier works dealt with how information is disseminated—paintings that look like redacted documents—and these flag works take the literal fabric of patriotism as their material."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Peck Wagner |first1=Madeleine |title=Shocking Event & UNSETTLING Art Paul Owen Weiner holds a black mirror to America |url=http://folioweekly.com/stories/shocking-event-and-unsettling-art,17957 |website=Folio Weekly |accessdate=19 December 2018}}</ref>


Weiner is also known for his earlier series of works focusing on the legal trial surrounding [[James Holmes]] and the [[2012 Aurora Shooting|2012 Aurora theater shooting]], which comment on the zeitgeist of a city rattled by mass violence and suggest peripheral issues relating to censorship within the American legal system.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Brown |first1=Phil |title=TRACE ELEMENTS: KIMBERLY ROWE AND PAUL WEINER |publisher=The Courier-Mail (Brisbane News) |date=21 January 2017}}</ref> In the lead up to a 2016 exhibition, ''Concrete Playground's'' Sarah Ward described how "the community Denver artist Paul Weiner called his own was rocked by tragedy when a man opened fire in a Colorado movie theatre" and "the horrific events sparked another kind of art: a response."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Ward |first1=Sarah |title=PAUL WEINER AND KIMBERLY ROWE: IN THE BALANCE |url=https://concreteplayground.com/brisbane/event/paul-weiner-and-kimberly-rowe-in-the-balance |website=Concrete Playground |accessdate=20 December 2018}}</ref> [[5280|''5280 Magazine'']] describes how his redacted paintings, which are direct transcriptions of significant legal documents from this trial, "became more conceptual in nature" and "those dark black lines became a recurring element in Weiner’s earliest explorations of the topic.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Singer |first1=Daliah |title=Art From Tragedy |url=https://www.5280.com/2015/10/art-from-tragedy/ |website=5280 |accessdate=20 December 2018}}</ref> ''Young Space's'' Kate Mothes describes the impact of "violence, especially in such close proximity to the Aurora cinema and its impact on his community" and how it "instilled an entirely new meaning and significance as an expression of self, the politics of painting, and his surroundings."<ref>{{cite web |last1=Mothes |first1=Kate |title=Paul Owen Weiner |url=https://www.yngspc.com/artists/2017/02/paul-owen-weiner/ |website=Young Space |accessdate=19 December 2018}}</ref>
Weiner works in a variety of mediums, but he is best known for his large-scale flag monoprint paintings and his works in charcoal on canvas.<ref>Gracia de Pedro, Maria. [http://www.daily-lazy.com/2018/10/paul-owen-weiner-at-krupic-kersting.html], ''Daily Lazy''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref> His flag-based works have been included in critical commentary referencing a lineage of American flag painters such as Jasper Johns.<ref>Peck Wagner, Madeline. [http://folioweekly.com/stories/shocking-event-and-unsettling-art,17957], ''Folio Weekly''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref> These works are notable for advancing the American flag painting lineage by using the American flag as a brush and material rather than an illusionistic element or painterly symbol. At the same time, Weiner's gestural and abstract charcoal works are created using giant willow branches and recycling the resulting materials and detritus to make further works that directly reference his studio. The use of these processes was notable in the works shown at Krupic Kersting Gallery in Cologne, Germany for his first European solo exhibition ''American Amnesia''. Weiner has discussed these simultaneous ways of painting as existing at the intersection of conceptual art and painting with his abstractions linked simultaneously to his culturally Jewish identity and the art historical lineage of American abstraction, which includes an array of Jewish artists and critics such as [[Helen Frankenthaler]], [[Adolph Gottlieb]], [[Clement Greenberg]], [[Philip Guston]], [[Lee Krasner]], [[Barnett Newman]], [[Harold Rosenberg]], [[Mark Rothko]], [[Hedda Sterne]], and [[Jack Tworkov]].<ref>Cuderman, Peter. "Paul Weiner Interview" ''30 &Under'', Scotts Valley, April 2018, pp. 202-205.</ref>


===Exhibitions===
Weiner is also known for his series of work focusing on the legal trial surrounding [[James Holmes]] and the [[2012 Aurora Shooting|2012 Aurora theater shooting]], which took place in his hometown. His redacted paintings, which appear with blacked out areas of paint covering the raw canvas, are direct transcriptions of the redacted areas of significant legal documents from this trial. Even as these works directly comment on zeitgeist of a city rattled by mass violence, they also suggest peripheral issues relating to censorship and the American legal system. Following a 2017 exhibition featuring these works in [[Brisbane, Australia|Brisbane]], Australia at TWFINEART, Weiner was interviewed by Kate Mothes for ''Young Space'', a popular outlet for the emerging art community. In that interview, Weiner discussed these works and said, "Painting is intrinsically political even when it isn’t made with that intent, and the inflection point of that shooting allowed me to open up to the politics of painting and find visual symbols that exist in a sort of post-conceptual place that references the outside world while remaining essentially abstract."<ref>Mothes, Kate. [https://www.yngspc.com/artists/2017/02/paul-owen-weiner/], ''Young Space''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref>
Weiner’s works have been exhibited alongside other notable artists such as [[Jonni Cheatwood]], [[Kevin Larmon]], [[Shana Lutker]], [[Linn Meyers]], [[Levan Mindiashvili]], [[Sabina Ott]], [[Claire Pentecost]], [[Amanda Ross-Ho]], [[Tracey Snelling]], [[Stephanie Syjuco]], [[Tony Tasset]], [[Jan Tichy]], [[Kuldeep Singh]], and [[Aaron Siskind]].<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cuderman |first1=Peter |title=30&under: Short Life Advice from Outliers Under 30 |date=21 May 2018 |publisher=CreateSpace Publishing |isbn=978-1717581495 |pages=202-205}}</ref>


Weiner’s works have been included in solo and group exhibitions at Krupic Kersting Gallery, Cologne, Germany; TWFINEART, Brisbane, Australia; [[Mana Contemporary]], Chicago, IL; Durden and Ray Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Re:Art, Brooklyn, NY; HF Johnson Gallery of Art, [[Carthage College]], Wisconsin; SABOT/MIMI/FASTER, Berlin, Germany; Long Road Projects, Jacksonville, Florida; Alto Gallery, Denver, Colorado; Chabah Yelmani Gallery, Brussels, Belgium; YIA Art Fair, Brussels, Belgium; ARTBandini Fair, Los Angeles, California; Miscellaneous Press, Los Angeles, California; Leeds College of Art, Leeds, UK; York St. John University, York, UK; and CTRL+SHFT, Oakland, CA among others.<ref>Gracia de Pedro, Maria. [http://www.daily-lazy.com/2018/10/paul-owen-weiner-at-krupic-kersting.html], ''Daily Lazy''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref> He has participated in residencies and visiting artist engagements at [[Carthage College]], Kenosha, Wisconsin; [[Syracuse University]], Syracuse, New York; Long Road Projects, Jacksonville, Florida; Miscellaneous Press, Los Angeles, California; and [[Front Range Community College]], Fort Collins, Colorado. While studying at Syracuse University<ref>[http://vpa.syr.edu/academics/art/alumni/] "Notable Alumni" Syracuse University. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref>, Weiner received the Augusta Hazard and Roswell Hill awards while studying under [[Kevin Larmon]], [[Sharon Gold]], [[Jerome Witkin]], and Andrew Havenhand.
Weiner's solo and group exhibitions have taken place at [[Mana Contemporary]], Chicago, IL; HF Johnson Gallery of Art, [[Carthage College]], Kenosha, Wisconsin; [[Leeds Arts University]], Leeds, UK; [[York St John University]], York, UK; Krupic Kersting Gallery, Cologne, Germany; TWFINEART, Brisbane, Australia; Durden and Ray Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Re:Art, Brooklyn, NY; MARQUEE Projects<ref>{{cite web |title=Flag Me Down Pick Me Up: Lisa Blas - Tyler Healy - Paul Weiner |url=https://www.marqueeprojects.org/flag-me-down-pick-me-up |website=MARQUEE PROJECTS |accessdate=20 December 2018}}</ref>, Bellport, NY; SABOT/MIMI/FASTER, Berlin, Germany; Long Road Projects, Jacksonville, Florida; Alto Gallery, Denver, Colorado; Chabah Yelmani Gallery, Brussels, Belgium; YIA Art Fair, Brussels, Belgium; ARTBandini Fair, Los Angeles, California; Miscellaneous Press, Los Angeles, California; and CTRL+SHFT, Oakland, CA among others.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Cuderman |first1=Peter |title=30&under: Short Life Advice from Outliers Under 30 |date=21 May 2018 |publisher=CreateSpace Publishing |isbn=978-1717581495 |pages=202-205}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Gracia de Pedro |first1=Maria |title=Paul Owen Weiner at Krupic Kersting Cologne, Germany |url=http://www.daily-lazy.com/2018/10/paul-owen-weiner-at-krupic-kersting.html |website=Daily Lazy |accessdate=19 December 2018}}</ref>

Weiner's works have received mixed reactions in critical circles. His 2018 European solo exhibition at Krupic Kersting Gallery was mentioned by Alexandra Wach as a highlight of the 2018 Düsseldorf Cologne Open weekend in ''[[Die Welt]]''<ref>Wach, Alexandra. [https://www.welt.de/print/die_welt/kultur/article181464016/Rheinischer-Spieltrieb.html], ''Die Welt''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref> and ''Monopol Magazin'' alongside concurrent exhibitions by artists [[Leiko Ikemura]], [[Sabine Moritz]], [[Sean Scully]], [[Hanne Darboven]], and [[Monika Sosnowska]].<ref>Wach, Alexandra. [https://www.monopol-magazin.de/rheinisches-galerienwochenende], ''Monopol – Magazin für Kunst und Leben''. Retrieved 14 November 2018.</ref>


== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
{{Reflist}}

== External links ==
* [http://www.paulowenweiner.com/, Paul Weiner's website]
* [http://www.kukgalerie.de/ARCHIVE/PREVIOUS-SHOWS/Paul-Weiner-American-Amnesia/index.php/ Paul Weiner, Krupic Kersting Gallery]
* [https://www.twfineart.com/collections/artist-paul-weiner Paul Weiner, TWFINEART]


{{authority control}}
{{authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Weiner, Paul}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Weiner, Paul}}
[[:Category:1993 births]]
[[:Category:People from Aurora, Colorado]]
[[:Category:People from Aurora, Colorado]]
[[:Category:American contemporary artists]]
[[:Category:American contemporary artists]]
[[:Category:Living people]]
[[:Category:American painters]]
[[:Category:Syracuse University alumni]]
[[:Category:Syracuse University alumni]]
[[:Category:21st-century American painters]]


== Paul Weiner ==
== Paul Weiner ==

Revision as of 19:39, 20 December 2018



Paul Weiner
Born
Paul Owen Weiner

(1993-07-06) 6 July 1993 (age 31)
Denver, Colorado
NationalityAmerican
EducationSyracuse University
Known forPainting

Paul Weiner is an American contemporary artist known for his paintings, sculptures, and drawings originating from topics of American symbolism, cultural hybridity, place, politics, and violence.[1][2] He lives and works in Denver, Colorado.[3] Weiner's works have been included in non-profit and university museums such as Mana Contemporary, HF Johnson Gallery of Art at Carthage College, Leeds Arts University, and York St John University as well as a variety of international gallery exhibitions in Australia, Belgium, Germany, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[4]

Life

Paul Weiner was born in Denver, Colorado in 1993 and raised in Aurora, Colorado. Weiner graduated from Syracuse University with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree.[5] He grew up a short distance from the site of the Columbine Massacre and, later, the 2012 Aurora theater shooting.[6][7]

Work

Weiner is best known for his large-scale American flag monoprint paintings and his works in charcoal on canvas. These works are notable for advancing the American flag painting lineage by using the American flag as a brush and material rather than an illusionistic element or painterly symbol.[8][9] Weiner's gestural and abstract charcoal works, which reference current events,[10] are created using giant willow branches and detritus from his studio. An article in Westword explains how, in his studio, "virtually every surface is covered in a layer of charcoal and paint."[11] The use of these processes was on display in the works shown at Krupic Kersting Gallery in Cologne, Germany, which received mixed reactions in critical circles.[12] In a review of the 2018 exhibition highlights of the Düsseldorf Cologne Open, Die Welt's Alexandra Wach remarked that Weiner's works are "weniger lieblich" or "less lovely" but that they also gave insight into the dark sensitivities of his generation regarding American politics and democracy.[13] Wach also commented on Weiner's work in Monopol Magazin für Kunst und Leben, where she described his American flag paintings as a "spätromantische Ode an den Untergang" or "a late romantic ode to the downfall."[14] In a 2017 article regarding Weiner's residency at Long Road Projects in Jacksonville, Folio Weekly's Madeleine Peck Wagner described his flag paintings as "designed to challenge viewer’s (and his own) notions of patriotism, nationalism and anxiety" and remarked that "censorship is a topic close to the artist. His earlier works dealt with how information is disseminated—paintings that look like redacted documents—and these flag works take the literal fabric of patriotism as their material."[15]

Weiner is also known for his earlier series of works focusing on the legal trial surrounding James Holmes and the 2012 Aurora theater shooting, which comment on the zeitgeist of a city rattled by mass violence and suggest peripheral issues relating to censorship within the American legal system.[16] In the lead up to a 2016 exhibition, Concrete Playground's Sarah Ward described how "the community Denver artist Paul Weiner called his own was rocked by tragedy when a man opened fire in a Colorado movie theatre" and "the horrific events sparked another kind of art: a response."[17] 5280 Magazine describes how his redacted paintings, which are direct transcriptions of significant legal documents from this trial, "became more conceptual in nature" and "those dark black lines became a recurring element in Weiner’s earliest explorations of the topic.[18] Young Space's Kate Mothes describes the impact of "violence, especially in such close proximity to the Aurora cinema and its impact on his community" and how it "instilled an entirely new meaning and significance as an expression of self, the politics of painting, and his surroundings."[19]

Exhibitions

Weiner’s works have been exhibited alongside other notable artists such as Jonni Cheatwood, Kevin Larmon, Shana Lutker, Linn Meyers, Levan Mindiashvili, Sabina Ott, Claire Pentecost, Amanda Ross-Ho, Tracey Snelling, Stephanie Syjuco, Tony Tasset, Jan Tichy, Kuldeep Singh, and Aaron Siskind.[20]

Weiner's solo and group exhibitions have taken place at Mana Contemporary, Chicago, IL; HF Johnson Gallery of Art, Carthage College, Kenosha, Wisconsin; Leeds Arts University, Leeds, UK; York St John University, York, UK; Krupic Kersting Gallery, Cologne, Germany; TWFINEART, Brisbane, Australia; Durden and Ray Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Re:Art, Brooklyn, NY; MARQUEE Projects[21], Bellport, NY; SABOT/MIMI/FASTER, Berlin, Germany; Long Road Projects, Jacksonville, Florida; Alto Gallery, Denver, Colorado; Chabah Yelmani Gallery, Brussels, Belgium; YIA Art Fair, Brussels, Belgium; ARTBandini Fair, Los Angeles, California; Miscellaneous Press, Los Angeles, California; and CTRL+SHFT, Oakland, CA among others.[22][23]

References

  1. ^ Brown, Phil (21 January 2017). "TRACE ELEMENTS: KIMBERLY ROWE AND PAUL WEINER". The Courier-Mail (Brisbane News).
  2. ^ Wach, Alexandra (8 September 2018). "Rheinischer Spieltrieb". Die Welt. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  3. ^ "Krupic Kersting Galerie KUK: Paul Owen Weiner". Artforum. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  4. ^ Cuderman, Peter (21 May 2018). 30&under: Short Life Advice from Outliers Under 30. CreateSpace Publishing. pp. 202–205. ISBN 978-1717581495.
  5. ^ "Notable Alumni Syracuse University". Syracuse University. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  6. ^ Rees, Hugh. "MEET PAUL OWEN WEINER". TWFINEART Blog. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  7. ^ Kordic, Angie. "New American Contemporary Art Presented at 44309 Gallery". Widewalls. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  8. ^ Gracia de Pedro, Maria. "Paul Owen Weiner at Krupic Kersting Cologne, Germany". Daily Lazy. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  9. ^ Peck Wagner, Madeleine. "Shocking Event & UNSETTLING Art Paul Owen Weiner holds a black mirror to America". Folio Weekly. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  10. ^ Anspon, Catherine. "Game Changing Houston Gallery Relaunches in River Oaks". Paper City Magazine.
  11. ^ Froyd, Susan. "Five Things for Art Lovers to Do and See This Weekend in Denver". Westword. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  12. ^ Schumann, Markus (15 October 2018). "Paul Owen Weiner - American Amnesia". No. September / October 2018. Kulturmagazin Stadtzauber.
  13. ^ Wach, Alexandra (8 September 2018). "Rheinischer Spieltrieb". Die Welt. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  14. ^ Wach, Alexandra. "Rheinisches Galerienwochenend: Highlights der DC Open". Monopol Magazin für Kunst und Leben. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  15. ^ Peck Wagner, Madeleine. "Shocking Event & UNSETTLING Art Paul Owen Weiner holds a black mirror to America". Folio Weekly. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  16. ^ Brown, Phil (21 January 2017). "TRACE ELEMENTS: KIMBERLY ROWE AND PAUL WEINER". The Courier-Mail (Brisbane News).
  17. ^ Ward, Sarah. "PAUL WEINER AND KIMBERLY ROWE: IN THE BALANCE". Concrete Playground. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  18. ^ Singer, Daliah. "Art From Tragedy". 5280. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  19. ^ Mothes, Kate. "Paul Owen Weiner". Young Space. Retrieved 19 December 2018.
  20. ^ Cuderman, Peter (21 May 2018). 30&under: Short Life Advice from Outliers Under 30. CreateSpace Publishing. pp. 202–205. ISBN 978-1717581495.
  21. ^ "Flag Me Down Pick Me Up: Lisa Blas - Tyler Healy - Paul Weiner". MARQUEE PROJECTS. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  22. ^ Cuderman, Peter (21 May 2018). 30&under: Short Life Advice from Outliers Under 30. CreateSpace Publishing. pp. 202–205. ISBN 978-1717581495.
  23. ^ Gracia de Pedro, Maria. "Paul Owen Weiner at Krupic Kersting Cologne, Germany". Daily Lazy. Retrieved 19 December 2018.


Category:People from Aurora, Colorado Category:American contemporary artists Category:Syracuse University alumni

Paul Weiner