Maxwell Sykes
September 3 – October 11, 2025
48 Ludlow Street, NYC
A pair of rectangular planes, a triangle. From there, a single block, a closer crop, a new form created by the convergence of two shapes. Sometimes the planes multiply: a line cleaving down the center splits one open; stacked horizontal bands barricade top from bottom. Pure, austere geometry dissolves in palpable brushstrokes and slight, sloping asymmetry.
And color. Canary yellow on a buttery ground, sun-warmed ivory against muddied gold. Innumerable shades of blue, each electric, each emitting its own charge. But just as geometry, here, is imperfect, these forms are not truly monochromatic. Underpaintings in altogether different hues appear in glimpses—in the rifts between strokes, behind thin washes of oil, or revealed through careful scoring.
Untitled (White)`, 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
84 x 80 inches
Untitled (Blue, Yellow), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
8.5 x 6.5 x 1.5 inches
When Maxwell Sykes moved to New York from his hometown of Los Angeles a year and a half ago, he found himself living on the edge of Madison Square Park. This micro-neighborhood is home to the flagship Shake Shack (the people’s Tavern on the Green) and the Flatiron building, perennially shrouded in scaffolding. But framed by Sykes’ window is another architectural marvel, the glitter of its gilded, pyramidal roof ricocheting off its surroundings. Built in 1927–28, the New York Life building was a Gothic Revival aberration in a skyline newly blooming with Art Deco cloud-grazers. Nearly a century later, looking out daily onto that gold-dipped structure—now an anomaly in an entirely different architectural landscape—Sykes began a series of paintings.
Untitled (Butter), 2025
Oil on canvas
48.5 x 36.5 x 1.5 inches
The oils on canvas here, a selection from that ongoing body of work, begin with that view. But the New York Life building is not depicted in Sykes’ paintings—parts of it have been distilled, others fragmented and reassembled, still other elements merged by the impressionistic haze of memory with different buildings seen from that same window. While intimate in their evocation of time, of a devotional form of looking, of an idea of home, these works are studies in gesture, composition, and color. Like those less tangible undercurrents (time, home, and looking), color is relational—constituted and changed by those around it, transformed by darkness or light. It’s also altered, associatively, by its form. Here, a fluted swath of white could be a marble column, the same hue contained by a halved triangle might evoke a sail.
Untitled (Green), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
15.5 x 12.5 x 1.5 inches
Often, the particular slice of outdoors delineated by the four sides of a window recedes into the background, as familiar as the enclosure of walls and belongings that separate us from it. But this familiarity is inflected with a special kind of intimacy: in the morning, at night, over weeks and seasons, the image made by your window is all yours, yet totally unpossessable. Returning again and again to that vista, Sykes’ aim is not to capture it, but to distill in paint those chosen elements that are all his own.
—Sophia Larigakis
Untitled (Green.1), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
12.5 x 9.5 x 1.5 inches
Maxwell Sykes (b. 1997) lives and works in New York, having relocated from his native Los Angeles. Sykes works primarily in oil painting, creating geometric abstractions that investigate observation and memory, architectural form and color study. His practice centers on the sustained observation of urban landscapes, transforming everyday views into complex investigations of how we process and remember our visual environment. Through repeated looking and painting, Sykes develops intimate relationships with architectural details that become the foundation for broader explorations of form, light, and spatial relationships.
Sykes' work has been featured in group exhibitions including A Forest at Hexton Gallery, Aspen, CO (2025), 4x4 organized by Ryan Preciado at Karma (2024) and at Central Server Works, Venice, CA (2022). In 2024, he curated the group exhibition Presque Vu at Central Server Works Venice. Maxwell Sykes' debut solo exhibition in New York opens in September 2025 at Entrance.
Untitled (City), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
31.5 x 25.5 x 2.5 inches
Scale image, Untitled (City), 2025
Untitled (Purple), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
29.5 x 23.5 x 2.5 inches
Untitled (Gray), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
64.75 x 54 inches
Untitled (Blue), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
60.5 x 48.5 x 1.5 inches
Untitled (Gray.1), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
18.5 x 14.5 x 1.5 inches
Untitled (Tower), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
12.5 x 9.5 x 1.5 inches
Untitled (Blue.2), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
16.5 x 12.5 x 1.25 inches
Untitled (Pink), 2025
Oil on canvas, artist frame
15.5 x 12.75 x 1.5 inches
For inquiries, email info@entrance.nyc