09/12/2025
Discovering the Lifework of Peter Heller
Thank you to everyone who came for Discovering the Lifework of Peter Heller. It has been an honor bringing Heller’s story to the world, and truly amazing to discuss his work with so many great people. Although the exhibition is over, we are still working hard to get Heller the recognition he deserves! We do still have some pieces hung, so feel free to come by and take another look!
If you’re just being introduced to the work, Peter Heller was an unknown abstract painter born in 1929 in Berlin, Germany. A Holocaust survivor, Heller was deeply influenced by both his experience of the war, and by the artistic movements converging during his coming of age in France and New York. After surviving the war in France, Heller studied painting at Columbia University and ultimately became a teacher. He settled in Morrisville, Vermont in 1968, where he taught art for over 25 years and raised his family. Throughout his entire life Peter painted religiously in his freetime, yet never sought representation. The vast majority of Peter’s work has never been seen, and, until now, has mostly been stored in the attic of his home since being created.
Heller’s visual language is remarkably cohesive, but within that consistency, no two paintings are the same. His paintings operate at the edge of representation, suggesting space and atmosphere while remaining intentionally ambiguous. His color palette is intuitive, most often adhering to oceanic blues and greens or earthy brown and ochre color schemes. Deep maroons, yellows, and sensual pinks and purples create further complexity, while fiery orange and scarlet are deployed with extreme selectivity. The layered surfaces and confident brushwork give the paintings a sense of movement, as if each scene is still unfolding. Many works carry a foreboding psychological weight, but Heller never tells a literal story; he believed that paintings should “interpret us,” not the other way around. The effectiveness of his technique makes your memories, your emotions, and your inner world just as important as the painting itself.
Cover Image:
Untitled #819 (c. 2002)
Oil on canvas