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    SummaryAmerican painter Celeste Dupuy-Spencer passed away on April 10, 2026 at the age of 46Dupuy-Spencer was known for her unapologetic images of American life amid social and political upheavalJeffrey Deitch gallery, who announced the news, will present an exhibition dedicated to the artist in their LA space later this weekCeleste Dupuy-Spencer, the painter whose work turned political pressure points into intimate reckonings, passed away at 46 years old in her home in Los Angeles on April 10. The news, without disclosing a cause, was shared the following morning by Jeffrey Deitch gallery.Dupuy-Spencer’s paintings capture the eccentricities and fractures and that embody an often contradictory national psyche. Her figures, tender in some places, unsettling in others, are rendered in frantic brushwork, grounding them in political reality as it plays out.Her best known piece is “Don't You See That I Am Burning” (2020), an evocative seven-foot-square scene of the January 6 riot with guns, confederate flags and ferocious crowds piling before the capitol. The piece illuminates Dupuy-Spencer’s empathetic and ardent eye when it came to political flashpoint, also seen in “Back to Where the Start Ended ('A Greeting to You from the Mud')” (2024), which depicts Israel's bombardment in Gaza and “Sarah” (2017), an intimate bedside scene with a former partner.“She looked at everything we’re too afraid to, spend our lives ignoring, denying, scrolling past, pretending isn’t there,” said Nina MacLaughlin, the writer of Dupuy-Spencer’s forthcoming debut book, Burning in the Eyes of the Maker. “She looked. And she showed us.” View this post on InstagramA post shared by Jeffrey Deitch (@jeffreydeitchgallery)Born in New York in 1979, Dupuy-Spencer grew up in Rhinebeck and studied art at Bard College. Though she never formally finished her BFA, through school, she became connected with prominent art figures, like professors Nicole Eisenman and Amy Sillman.She later moved to New Orleans, where she stayed and worked in rehab facility, recovering from addiction. At the time, she lost interest in art, though, on a whim, moved to Los Angeles, where she met gallerist Nino Mier. Mier “immediately fell in love” with her work, and mounted a sold-out solo for the artist in 2016, which catalyzed her meteoric rise.The following year, she was one of few painters to be included in the sculpture-heavy 2017 Whitney Biennial. In 2018, she was tapped to partake in the Hammer Museum’s Made in L.A. biennial, to which the edition’s curator, Anne Ellegood, who described her as “one of the painters of her generation.”While her work channels the horror, anger and longing of contemporary life, love and tenderness persist in equal measure. “One of the things that’s happening in my work is like a sympathy for, not in a pitiful way, but sort of sympathy for humanity,” Dupuy-Spencer told the Whitney Museum.In the wake of her passing, Jeffrey Deitch gallery will honor the artist with a show of recent works at their LA space later this week.

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