Anthony Cudahy (born 1989) is a contemporary American painter whose work addresses queer experience and the relationship between contemporary figurative painting and its historical precedents.
He creates figurative compositions that draw on personal photographs, queer archival imagery, art history, and film stills. His paintings are often rendered with areas of phosphorescent color against denser, muted passages.
Anthony Cudahy was born in 1989 and grew up in Fort Myers, Florida. He moved to New York City and earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Pratt Institute in 2011. He completed a Master of Fine Arts at Hunter College in 2020.
After graduating from Pratt in 2011, Cudahy worked as a graphic designer for nearly a decade while continuing to paint. In 2013âÂÂ14, he was an artist-in-residence at the ARTHA Project in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. His first solo exhibition, Heaven Inside, opened at Uprise Art Outpost in 2014. He is represented by GRIMM, Hales Gallery, and Semiose.
Cudahy's paintings pair delicate figural drawing with broad abstract passages. His subjects are often solitary figures or couples in dreamlike, ambiguous settings. He repeatedly paints people from his life, including his husband and close friends, in scenes that range from observational portraits to allegorical narratives, open to interpretation.
Cudahy works from a personal archive of snapshots, film stills, screenshots, and historical queer photographs. By repainting these appropriated images, he shifts their original context to surface intimate moments and marginalized stories, particularly those tied to queer experience. He cites Pieter Bruegel the Elder, Albrecht Dürer, Lucian Freud, Caspar David Friedrich, Chris Ofili, and Jenny Saville as influences.
Cudahy typically works wet-on-wet in long sessions, aiming to complete each painting's first layer in one sitting to preserve its luminosity and energy. Cudahy also makes colored pencil drawings.
Cudahy's work has been described as depicting "queer intimacy in the mundane" and blurring "the mundane and the sacred." Artsy called Cudahy "a serious painter who's also an unpredictable storyteller" and "a reliable narrator of the era." Critics have compared his work to that of Peter Doig and Salman Toor; he has also been grouped alongside Janiva Ellis, Genieve Figgis, and Cy Gavin as contemporaries working in a similar figurative mode. L'Express likened Cudahy's precision in drawing and use of color to David Hockney's, and described his éclectisme audacieux () as unmatched among young figurative painters internationally. BOMB described his practice as "painting that thinks through other images," noting how he reinterpreted works by neglected and often unattributed older artists.
Cudahy lives and works in Brooklyn with his husband, photographer Ian Lewandowski.
Cudahy's work is in the permanent collections of several institutions, including: