Videos
Bar at the Four Seasons
Looking at the Commissioned Oil painting of New York's Landmark Four Seasons
This meticulously orchestrated large-scale fugue was commissioned by one of the patrons of the landmark Four Seasons Restaurant in mid-town Manhattan. Comprising over fifty figures and standing seven and a half feet wide, this remarkable oil painting by John Varriano renders and immortalizes the energy and patronage of one of New York’s most renowned and high-powered establishments.

Fine Art Chronicles
John Varriano,
American Artist

John Varriano, American Artist,
Bar at the Four Seasons

Exhibition
John Varriano, Mythologems Volume I
New York
219 East 69th Street
Fl. 12
On View Dec. 5 2024 - Feb. 1 2025
Please join us
Artist's Reception
Thurs. Dec. 5 2024
6 - 8 pm
Bellaron Gallery / New York
219 East 69th Street
Fl. 12
When you RSVP kindly let us know if you will be bringing a guest.
Exhibition
John Varriano, Mythologems Volume I
New York
219 East 69th Street
Fl. 12
On View December 5th 2024 - February 1st 2025
Please join us
Artist's Reception
Thursday, December 5th 2024
6 - 8 pm
Bellaron Gallery / New York
219 East 69th Street
Fl. 12
When you RSVP kindly let us know if you will be bringing a guest.

Fine Art Chronicles

Internationally recognized, John Varriano, American Artist is best known for his multi-disciplinary mastery of the visual arts. His provocative body of work possesses that sublime ability to strike suddenly and deeply at one's inner being. Rich and robust colors seem to pop off the canvas while a magical melding of layers reveal carefully crafted, finely honed psychological examinations.
Varriano’s figurative and portraiture paintings display an exceptional talent for delivering unabashed proclamations of the human condition. For Varriano, the blinding beauty of the subject matter is made more exquisite and whole by the dark and hidden material that lies beneath. It is always the shadows, materially and metaphorically, that allow one to see and experience the light.
Varriano’s command of abstract oil painting is otherworldly. He gives his audience a masterful outpouring of explosive forms, shapes, and textures counterbalanced by stark discipline, containment, and restrain. Varriano handles paint and the transmission of ideas with exceptional “grace,” leading one to conclude the higher worlds he captures are his natural habitat. Rather than shock and awe, Varriano delivers only awe.
Artistic Roots
John Varriano was born into a family of artists and artisans. His father Angelo was a brilliant abstract sculptor and inventor. Both his maternal and paternal uncles expressed considerable artistic prowess. And his paternal grandfather Giovanni was an exceptionally talented artisan who spent much of his later years creating large, classically proportioned vases inlaid with exquisitely intricate mosaics.
His cousin, John, who shares the same first and last name, is a teacher at The Arts Students League in New York City. A younger cousin Jon is a highly respected commercial graphic designer, and a distant cousin John is an art historian and author of books on Caravaggio, Baroque Architecture, and Art.
Early Years
Immersed in the arts from an early age, Varriano has been drawing, painting and sculpting since childhood. His introduction to artists' tools came about at the age of five. A family member recalls how
“The passionate young artist showed his father a series of play-doh figures he made. Unimpressed with the medium, his father took him to Manhattan’s art district to purchase oil paints, sculpting clay, art pencils, and implements."
From that point onward, Varriano would spend much of his youth and young adulthood in his father’s studio, honing his artistic skills. He credits his father with instilling a taste for top-notch materials and the importance of gaining knowledge through experimentation with various applications and techniques.
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Read More
Like many children, he loved the colorful and heroic figures presented to him in comic books. Along with drawing superheroes, he created meticulous studies of the great Renaissance masters, drawing, painting, and sculpting copies of work from Michelangelo, Caracci, Raphael, and the giants of the Renaissance and Baroque eras. Exposure to his father’s abstract sculptures aroused a profound connection with abstract expressionism and paved the way for his early work and lifelong love of this art form.
Education
In adolescence Varriano gained acceptance to a rigorous program at The High School of Art & Design in Manhattan. Young and filled with an insatiable appetite for learning, Varriano voraciously ingested the higher aesthetic applications from late antiquity to the modern era. His daily proximity to The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Guggenheim, MOMA, and Frick resulted in quite a few days of hooky from school. The museums opened up vast vistas of art through the ages. In their galleries, he found kindred spirits: in their bookstores, he found gateways to limitless knowledge.
While he had tremendous respect for his teachers, Varriano's time at Art & Design taught him that he should pursue an autodidactic course of higher education. A polymath from birth, Varriano’s curiosity led him to study art, architecture, engineering, higher mathematics, science, history, philosophy, politics, music, literature, and foreign languages. He views art not as an isolated field of endeavor but one closely related to the totality of humankind's achievements and society's needs at present.

Abstract Oil Paintings
Illuminating higher states of consciousness, John Varriano provides the visual landscape that allows us to witness and cultivate a dialogue with the transcendent spirit dwelling within.
Higher mathematics, physics, color, shape, harmony, and music play significant roles in these creations. Varriano shows us worlds dwelling within worlds, the interplay of form and movement, and life pulsing through hardened stone as atoms move, collide, and reorient themselves. He reveals the secrets of antiquity and prophecies for the future layered upon one another. And he shows us what it looks like when the spheres speak, and harmony and lyrics take on material form.
A highly gifted and prolific artist, Varriano has created an important and evocative series of interrelated conceptual categories (Abstract: Crystalism, Dreamology, Figurativism, Metamorphism, Spiritism, and Structuralism) that symbolize progressive developments and flowering of abstract art.
This is the text area for this paragraph. To change it, simply click here and start typing.
John Varriano, Crab, 2010, Oil on Canvas, 34 x 42 (86.36 x 106.68) - "Abstract Crystalism"

John Varriano, Magi, 2004, Oil on Canvas, 36 x 24 (76.2 x 60.96) - "Abstract Metamorphism"
John Varriano, Sarcophagus, 2004, Oil on Canvas, 36 x 24 (76.2 x 60.96) - "Abstract Metamorphism"
ARTICLES
John Varriano, American Artist Takes on Mythological Motifs in Art
By: Maria Loredan Avington
John Varriano American Artist, in studio seated in front of "Fall of Icarus"
Entering the studio of John Varriano, American Artist, one finds oneself reverently impressed with the sublime contrasts in his abstract works. Some paintings, like “Red Square,” have a decidedly geometric and linear aspect. Not surprisingly, since Varriano possess an affinity for higher mathematics and physics. Unexpectedly though, in “Red Square” it is not the shapes that take up space, it is the color. In this painting, one finds Varriano has substituted color for gravity, granting one a transcendental experience where art and science align. We are not quite sure if the objects are moving or pulsating, whether they belong to this reality or another. Varriano calls this style of painting, abstract structuralism, one of the many forms of abstract art that he has created during his prolific career as an artist. In viewing "Red Square," I am reminded of the 19th century novel, Flatland, by Edwin Abbott Abbot and I desire to know if these forms are aware of their existence. Varriano’s paintings seem to intentionally arouse fantastic ruminations.
Representing a different type of artistic achievement than his sharply constructed dimensionalities is “Catharsis,” a free-wielding explosion of artistic force which highlights Varriano’s mastery of abstract expressionism. In its creation, Varriano attacked the canvas, applying paint with a mixture of brushes, palette knives, and diverse tools to achieve a unique expression. The work required an intense measure of physical endurance, mental concentration, and emotional energy.
Among others, there is Varriano’s “Abstract Crystalism” a style he defines as the faceting, dissecting, and restructuring of form and space with the flattening of shifting perspective and the use of brilliant color. The Crystalism paintings pop with extraordinary vibrancy and motility. I find myself marveling at all his makings as my eye comes to rest on “Fall of Icarus,” a powerful and evocative telling of the mythological story in abstract terms.
Fall of Icarus, stands at 30 inches by 36 inches and is one of Varriano’s earlier paintings completed in 1999. Mythological motifs have occupied a substantial part of Varriano’s work from the onset of his career to the present, and represent some of his most profound and powerful images. As he prepares for an upcoming exhibition which will feature a number of his new mythological themes, it is fitting for us to examine the first fruits of this labor, a study that includes the man as well as his art.

John Varriano American Artist, "Fall of Icarus," 1999, oil on canvas, 30 x 36, abstract
Enamored with heroic and mythological motifs since childhood, Varriano has had a long and intimate relationship with their deeper meanings and nuances. The stories and symbols that bubble up from the unconscious and are part of humanity's shared heritage appear to Varriano in what can only be termed, visionary form. For Varriano, what is particularly enthralling about myths are their ability to speak and direct us toward higher, loftier truths. “Each time we turn to them, they reveal something new, which can never be completely discerned or exhausted.” Like many ancient stories, Icarus’s fall resonates deeply with the artist, and its creation coincided with a period of severe and intense inner struggle. One Varriano describes as “A soul yearning to fulfill its destiny and finding itself burned in the process.” From one observation, the fall should not have happened. From another, it was inevitable.
Varriano presents Icarus in those fleeting moments when he realizes the cost of his ecstatic, soaring desire. Having flown too close to the sun, the wings fashioned by his father, Daedalus begin to burn. Varriano uses a fiery palette of crisp oranges, reds, and icy steel blues to bring the ferity of the sun and the emotional state of Icarus sharply into focus. At first glance, there appears little that is human in Varriano’s depiction. Completely rendered in abstraction, Varriano has chosen to give us an external portrayal of Icarus’s inner turmoil. We see, what may be depicted as an eye, in the center of the head. Why one eye, we may wonder? As we quietly muse over the question, Varriano gently guides us to an answer we have intuitively perceived…. “When we are in extreme distress do we not become singularly focused, and do we not begin to see with penetrating perception?” The answer is straightforward, literal, and excellently fashioned. This is part of Varriano’s mastery, the ability to reveal things explicitly as well as implicitly. We are drawn in and captivated by layer after layer of artistic expression.

John Varriano, American Artist "World of Abstraction," Exhibition Varriano Fine Art December 2023 to February 2024
Moving our sight down the center of the canvas, we encounter what we can assume to be the body, puffed up and slightly rounded, as though bursting with innumerable, uncontrollable feelings. Varriano awakens our emotional understanding through shape, color and movement. The wings that once stood as a symbol for Icarus’s freedom have become his downfall and are now jagged and ravished by the flames. They too, seem to cry out in anguish. Then there is the sea: dark blue and green, ominous and violent in mood and texture but also mysterious and undoubtedly deep. For millennia the fall of Icarus has been a cautionary tale about flying too high and being cast down by our folly. Varriano has thoughtfully and provocatively conveyed this idea but one can also recognize a subtle intimation that the painting communicates something more. Varriano’s abstract paintings require time to contemplate and an opening of the mind if we are to experience their rich, layered meanings and the mastery of the artist.
According to the Greek myth, Icarus’s father, Daedalus built the paradigmatic labyrinth for King Minos of Crete to secure the man-bull Minotaur begotten by his wife Pasiphae. Initially pleased by the craftsman’s work, at a later date Minos becomes angry with Daedalus’s and decides to imprison him and his son in the maze. Possessing an ingenious mind, Daedalus creates two pairs of wings for him and his son to escape and fly to the island of Sicily. He cautions Icarus not to fly too high lest he be burnt by the sun nor too low lest the sea water dampen and weigh down his wings. Overcome with enthusiasm and exaltation Icarus accidently flies too high and close to the sun. With this general outline of the story let us return our attention to the palette Varriano used in this painting. We find deep, somber reds melding into vivid, vibrant, oranges, which in turn transform into silvery blues, and finally iridescent whites. With his choice and application of color, Varriano presents us with the transmutation of fire: as it burns hotter it becomes brighter, altering its qualities in progressive stages from red to white. In the script of the ancient world, this type of transformation is an alchemical process whereby the baser characteristics of an individual are purified and the soul is elevated to new heights and greater understanding.
If we look to the upper left portion of the canvas, we encounter a sky that is dark and filled with smoke. Interestingly, on the right, the sky is opalescent, so much so that we might imagine a benevolent voice speaking to us through the parting clouds. While the story of Icarus is one regarding the cost of overzealous ambition, the warning not fly to low is equally perilous. In it's most literal interpretation, the myth is meant to remind us to maintain balance. But! And this bears a very resounding exclamation mark for Varriano, “Anyone who has sought higher heights knows that balance is not easily achieved nor maintained. “ Punishment from the gods, in the form of failure and fall, are customarily part of the path we tread. However, who the gods punish, they may also redeem.
All people who have stretched out their hand toward a higher aim have, in their turn, faced the trials of fire in one form or another. Like our tragic hero Icarus there is often great suffering and through that suffering there is a possibility for future redemption. This is the imparting idea Varriano subtly communicates through the transformation of fire, and partially luminous sky. He is telling our hero, and us, to hold on. There is a second act. The story of Icarus does not end with his burning, for out of the ashes a phoenix may be born. The painting stands as a reminder to arise from adversity and transfigure life’s challenges into the illuminating fire of courage and creativity.
Bellaron Gallery is pleased our first exhibition by John Varriano, American Artist at its 219 East 69th Street gallery.
Running from December 5th 2024, to February 3rd 2025, the show, Mythologems Volume I, will spotlight thirty works by the artist, including eighteen new creations revealed for the first time. The presentation will be accompanied by a new catalogue from Bellaron Publishing.
Varriano, who lives and works in New York, is known for his sweeping command and multidisciplinary mastery of the visual arts. His provocative body of work possesses the sublime ability to strike suddenly and deeply at one's inner being to awaken thoughts, emotions, and intuitions that lie beyond the ordinary states of seeing and perceiving.
In this exhibition of the artist's Mythologems, Varriano brings the archaic and archetypal patterns of consciousness sharply into focus using several significant, ground-breaking styles he has developed over his thirty-plus years as an artist.
Read More
Engaged with the mystical, magical, heroic, and ideal from an early age, Varriano adeptly converses with those images that live in the deeper recesses of consciousness to give us "makings" that can inform, heal, and propel humanity to loftier heights and greater understandings.
Thematically, the exhibition presents three distinct yet related aspects of evolution: the collective evolution of humanity, the evolution of the individual, and the evolution of abstract art. A highly gifted and prolific artist, Varriano has created an important and evocative series of interrelated conceptual categories (Abstract: Metamorphism, Surrealism, Crystalism, and Figurativism) that symbolize progressive developments and flowering of abstract art.
Eruption, which is a sublime example of the artist's Abstract Metamorphism is representative of the development of thematic concepts as they unfold through the creative process. Raw, mutable, intertwined shapes, dazzling color plays, and strenuously, yearning silhouettes appear to breathe, sweat, and rise as they engender a visual model of the earliest stages of anthropic evolution.
With his Abstract Surrealism, Varriano creates a dreamlike fantasy that emerges as a new synthesis of form and space. Prodigiously depicted in the artist's painting titled Oracle, Abstract Surrealism draws us into the timeless, unrestrained stirrings of consciousness where images float, move, and stream past the screen of the mind to inform and guide us of their own accord. For Varriano, the ability to engage with the images that bubble forth, unbridled, is as imperative today as it was to our primitive ancestors and remains an aspect of consciousness that we must regularly stimulate, as overconfidence in technologism, empiricism, and materialism threatens the fountainhead of humanities inspiration and meaning.
In the artist's Abstract Crystalism, we encounter a finely honed, innovative progression of Cubism. This is owed in part to Varriano's background in engineering and architecture, which allows him to view matter from multiple perspectives and dissect and restructure reality to create a fusion between subject, space, and time. His new abstract oil painting, Apollo and Daphne, vividly demonstrates this refined ideal, presented in flattened, faceted, shifting perspectives, bold lines, and brilliant color.
As the evolution of consciousness propels us to greater concretism, so too does Varriano's innovative style of Abstract Figurativism, which uses abstraction to develop figurative forms in an expressive way to heighten the reality of the subject. In Varriano's painting, titled, Gods and Titans, we find interconnecting figures locked in an eternal thrusting and pulling of physical and mental power and might. War or dance, who can say? The gods and titans move with and against one another just as the mind's inner workings have occasion to do, just as the people of Earth have done and continue to do.
While Abstract Expressionism is a familiar innovation, Varriano's command of abstract oil painting is remarkably innovative and otherworldly. He gives his audience a masterful outpouring of explosive forms, shapes, and textures counterbalanced by stark discipline, containment, and restraint. Varriano handles paint and the transmission of ideas with exceptional "grace," leading one to conclude the higher worlds he captures are his natural habitat. Rather than shock and awe, Varriano delivers only awe.
Featured Works
John Varriano, American Artist,
Gods and Titans
2024, Oil on canvas
30" x 30"
(76.2 cm x 76.2 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Eruption
2024, Oil on canvas
48" x 60"
(121.92 cm x 152.4 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Oracle
2024, Oil on canvas
48" x 36"
(121.92 cm x 91.44 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Apollo and Daphne
2024, Oil on canvas
48" x 48"
(121.92 cm x 121.92 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Cave Painting # 5
2024, Oil on canvas
36" x 24"
(91.44 cm x 60.96 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Cave Painting # 6
2024, Oil on canvas
36" x 24"
(91.44 cm x 60.96 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Dance of the Damned
2000, Oil on canvas
30" x 30"
(76.2 cm x 76.2 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Taurus
2024, Oil on canvas
48" x 48"
(121.92 cm x 121.92 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Fall of Icarus
1999, Oil on canvas
30" x 36"
(76.2 cm x 91.44 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Big Bang
2024, Oil on canvas
20" x 24"
(50.8 cm x 60.96 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Conception
2024, Oil on canvas
20" x 24"
(50.8 cm x 60.96 cm)
John Varriano, American Artist,
Celestial Carnivore
2007, Oil on canvas
30" x 40"
(76.2 cm x 101.6 cm)
Installation Views
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About the Artist
John Varriano, American Artist, is a painter and sculptor living in New York. His command of abstract oil painting and sculpture is otherworldly, giving his audience a masterful outpouring of explosive forms, shapes, and textures counterbalanced by stark discipline, containment, and restraint. Varriano handles paint and the transmission of ideas with exceptional “grace,” leading one to conclude the higher worlds he captures are his natural habitat. Rather than shock and awe, Varriano delivers only awe.
Working long, solitary hours in his studio, his creative process is a fully engaged, rigorous exercise that involves powerful, dynamic, and disciplined mental, emotional, and physical prowess. Serving as a conduit between the collective unconscious and conscious mind, Varriano progressively brings to light those elements once dark and hidden.
Read More
Varriano’s abstract works offer an encounter with higher states of consciousness and inner evolution. He provides the visual landscape that can witness and cultivate a dialogue with the transcendent spirit dwelling within. Higher mathematics, physics, color, shape, harmony, and music play significant roles in these creations. Varriano shows us worlds dwelling within worlds, the interplay of form and movement, and life pulsing through hardened stone as atoms move, collide, and reorient themselves.
He reveals the secrets of antiquity and prophecies for the future layered upon one another. And he shows us what it looks like when the spheres speak, and harmony and lyrics take on material form. A virtuoso with color, shape, texture, and tactility, Varriano's paintings are bold and magnificently orchestrated.
A highly gifted and prolific artist, Varriano has created an important and evocative series of interrelated conceptual categories (Abstract: Metamorphism, Surrealism, Crystalism, Figurativism, Structuralalism, and Spiritism) that symbolize progressive developments and the flowering of abstract art. The first four are featured prominently in this new exhibition.
John Varriano was the first artist in more than 50 years to have a painting featured on the cover of the New York Times accompanied by an in-depth article. NBC news dedicated a special television segment on the artist that proved so popular it ran in New York taxi cabs for a month. Globo TV, Brazil’s largest network and ABC.es in Spain have also featured stories on the Varriano. Among other media outlets have been Vanity Fair and Greenwich Time.
Varriano has exhibited his work in galleries as far away as Abu Dhabi and as near as New York City. Since 2022, he is represented globally by Bellaron Gallery, located on the upper east side of Manhattan.
ARTIST'S RECEPTION
Thursday
Dec. 5, 2024
6 - 8 pm
EXHIBITION DETAILS
John Varriano, American Artist
Mythologems Volume I
Dec. 5, 2024 - Feb 3, 2025
GALLERY
219 East 69th Street
Floor 12
New York, NY
By Appointment
PRESS
Press Release
CONNECT
@johnvarriano.americanartist
ARTIST'S RECEPTION
Thursday
December 5, 2024
6 - 8 pm
EXHIBITION DETAILS
John Varriano, American Artist
_____________________________________________________________
Mythologems Volume I
Dec. 5, 2024 - Feb 3, 2025
GALLERY
219 East 69th Street
Floor 12
New York, NY
By Appointment
646.667.2999
PRESS
Press Release
CONNECT
@johnvarriano.americanartist
Above: John Varriano, American Artist, Eruption
(detail) 2024 ©, John Varriano.
Bellaron Gallery is pleased to present our first exhibition of John Varriano, American Artist at its 219 East 69th Street gallery.
Running from December 5th, 2024 to February 3rd, 2025 the show, Mythologems Volume I, will spotlight thirty works by the artist, including eighteen new creations revealed for the first time. The presentation will be accompanied by a new catalogue from Bellaron Publishing.
Varriano, who lives and works in New York, is known for his sweeping command and multidisciplinary mastery of the visual arts. His provocative body of work possesses the sublime ability to strike suddenly and deeply at one's inner being to awaken thoughts, emotions, and intuitions that lie beyond the ordinary states of seeing and perceiving.
In this exhibition of the artist's Mythologems, Varriano brings the archaic and archetypal patterns of consciousness sharply into focus using several significant, ground-breaking styles he has developed over his thirty-plus years as an artist. Engaged with the mystical, magical, heroic, and ideal from an early age, Varriano adeptly converses with those images that live in the deeper recesses of consciousness to give us "makings" that can inform, heal, and propel humanity to loftier heights and greater understandings.
Read More
Thematically, the exhibition presents three distinct yet related aspects of evolution: the collective evolution of humanity, the evolution of the individual, and the evolution of abstract art. A highly gifted and prolific artist, Varriano has created an important and evocative series of interrelated conceptual categories (Abstract: Metamorphism, Surrealism, Crystalism, and Figurativism) that symbolize progressive developments and flowering of abstract art.
Eruption, which is a sublime example of the artist's Abstract Metamorphism is representative of the development of thematic concepts as they unfold through the creative process. Raw, mutable, intertwined shapes, dazzling color plays, and strenuously, yearning silhouettes appear to breathe, sweat, and rise as they engender a visual model of the earliest stages of anthropic evolution.
With his Abstract Surrealism, Varriano creates a dreamlike fantasy that emerges as a new synthesis of form and space. Prodigiously depicted in the artist's painting titled Oracle, Abstract Surrealism draws us into the timeless, unrestrained stirrings of consciousness where images float, move, and stream past the screen of the mind to inform and guide us of their own accord. For Varriano, the ability to engage with the images that bubble forth, unbridled, is as imperative today as it was to our primitive ancestors and remains an aspect of consciousness that we must regularly stimulate, as overconfidence in technologism, empiricism, and materialism threatens the fountainhead of humanities inspiration and meaning.
In the artist's Abstract Crystalism, we encounter a finely honed, innovative progression of Cubism. This is owed in part to Varriano's background in engineering and architecture, which allows him to view matter from multiple perspectives and dissect and restructure reality to create a fusion between subject, space, and time. His new abstract oil painting, Apollo and Daphne, vividly demonstrates this refined ideal, presented in flattened, faceted, shifting perspectives, bold lines, and brilliant color.
As the evolution of consciousness propels us to greater concretism, so too does Varriano's innovative style of Abstract Figurativism, which uses abstraction to develop figurative forms in an expressive way to heighten the reality of the subject. In Varriano's painting, titled, Gods and Titans, we find interconnecting figures locked in an eternal thrusting and pulling of physical and mental power and might. War or dance, who can say? The gods and titans move with and against one another just as the mind's inner workings have occasion to do, just as the people of Earth have done and continue to do.
While Abstract Expressionism is a familiar innovation, Varriano's command of abstract oil painting is remarkably innovative and otherworldly. He gives his audience a masterful outpouring of explosive forms, shapes, and textures counterbalanced by stark discipline, containment, and restraint. Varriano handles paint and the transmission of ideas with exceptional "grace," leading one to conclude the higher worlds he captures are his natural habitat. Rather than shock and awe, Varriano delivers only awe.

Figurative Oil Paintings
Varriano’s figurative works plunge us into the depths of the psyche. These paintings spark a more profound understanding of the human condition and act as a mirror for the ever-evolving development of the soul.
Peering into the cool depths of a deal-maker's eyes, we discover the calm composure that plays a powerful role in successful negotiations. Journeying with commuters to and from work, we experience the daily grind that wears us out and the random impetuses that awaken and remind us that we are alive. Privy to people's private, domestic rituals, we gain a more intimate and personal knowledge of one another. Witnessing the ravaging effects of vice, squalor, and homelessness, we encounter the suffering that cuts deeply into ourselves and our society.
Contemplating Varriano's many figures, we realize that in observing others so perceptively, we come to a deeper understanding of ourselves. The human condition is a shared condition. As the soul opens itself to this truth, it becomes more distinctly collective, at the same time, more distinctly individual. We find ourselves that much closer to becoming who we were born to be.
National and International Recognition
John Varriano was the first artist in more than 50 years to have a painting featured on the cover of the New York Times accompanied by an in-depth article. NBC news dedicated a special television segment on the artist that proved so popular it ran in New York taxi cabs for a month. Globo TV, Brazil’s largest network and ABC.es in Spain have also featured stories on the Varriano. Among other media outlets have been Vanity Fair and Greenwich Time.
Exhibitions
Varriano has exhibited his work in galleries in New York City, Palm Beach and Abu Dhabi. Since 2024 he is represented globally by Bellaron Gallery, located on the upper east side of Manhattan.
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John Varriano, Crab, 2010, Oil on Canvas, 34 x 42 (86.36 x 106.68) - "Abstract Crystalism"


John Varriano, Nigronius Pontificus, 2009, Oil on Canvas, 48 x 40 (121.92 x 101.6)
John Varriano, The Counselor, 2009, Oil on Canvas, 54 x 40 (137.16 x 101.6)

About the Artist
John Varriano, American Artist, is a painter and sculptor living in New York. His command of abstract oil painting and sculpture is otherworldly, giving his audience a masterful outpouring of explosive forms, shapes, and textures counterbalanced by stark discipline, containment, and restraint. Varriano handles paint and the transmission of ideas with exceptional “grace,” leading one to conclude the higher worlds he captures are his natural habitat. Rather than shock and awe, Varriano delivers only awe.
Working long, solitary hours in his studio, his creative process is a fully engaged, rigorous exercise that involves powerful, dynamic, and disciplined mental, emotional, and physical prowess. Serving as a conduit between the collective unconscious and conscious mind, Varriano progressively brings to light those elements once dark and hidden.
Read More
Varriano’s abstract works offer an encounter with higher states of consciousness and inner evolution. He provides the visual landscape that can witness and cultivate a dialogue with the transcendent spirit dwelling within. Higher mathematics, physics, color, shape, harmony, and music play significant roles in these creations. Varriano shows us worlds dwelling within worlds, the interplay of form and movement, and life pulsing through hardened stone as atoms move, collide, and reorient themselves.
He reveals the secrets of antiquity and prophecies for the future layered upon one another. And he shows us what it looks like when the spheres speak, and harmony and lyrics take on material form. A virtuoso with color, shape, texture, and tactility, Varriano's paintings are bold and magnificently orchestrated.
A highly gifted and prolific artist, Varriano has created an important and evocative series of interrelated conceptual categories (Abstract: Metamorphism, Surrealism, Crystalism, Figurativism, Structuralalism, and Spiritism) that symbolize progressive developments and the flowering of abstract art. The first four are featured prominently in this new exhibition.
John Varriano was the first artist in more than 50 years to have a painting featured on the cover of the New York Times accompanied by an in-depth article. NBC news dedicated a special television segment on the artist that proved so popular it ran in New York taxi cabs for a month. Globo TV, Brazil’s largest network and ABC.es in Spain have also featured stories on the Varriano. Among other media outlets have been Vanity Fair and Greenwich Time.
Varriano has exhibited his work in galleries as far away as Abu Dhabi and as near as New York City. Since 2022, he is represented globally by Bellaron Gallery, located on the upper east side of Manhattan.
Videos
Bar at the Four Seasons
Looking at the Commissioned Oil painting of New York's Landmark Four Seasons
This meticulously orchestrated large-scale fugue was commissioned by one of the patrons of the landmark Four Seasons Restaurant in mid-town Manhattan. Comprising over fifty figures and standing seven and a half feet wide, this remarkable oil painting by John Varriano renders and immortalizes the energy and patronage of one of New York’s most renowned and high-powered establishments.





















