Artistic practice Guyton's early "
drawings" from around 2003, are filled with black Xs over ripped-out book pages. The color black and the letter X became signature motifs. Typically Guyton's work is exhibited in a series. In a 2004 statement, Guyton said: Recently I've been using Epson inkjet printers and flatbed scanners as tools to make works that act like drawings, paintings, even sculptures. I spend a lot of time with books and so logically I've ended up using pages from books as material- pages torn from books and fed through an inkjet printer. I've been using a very pared down vocabulary of simple shapes and letters drawn or typed in Microsoft Word, then printed on top of these pages from catalogues, magazines, posters- and even blank canvas. The resulting images aren't exactly what the machines are designed for - slick digital photographs. There is often a struggle between the printer and my material - and the traces of this are left on the surface: snags, drips, streaks, mis-registrations, blurs.
New York Times Paintings in 2022 In November 2016, Guyton exhibits a new series of New York Times Paintings that show headlines about violence around the world and news leading up to the 2016 US Presidential Election. The exhibition opens the day after Hillary Clinton loses the election to Donald Trump. Jason Farago in the New York Times writes "Mr. Guyton's paintings … do not depict pages of a newspaper at all — they depict the website of a media company that publishes news in many formats. That is a significant difference. As he told The Times in 2012, "I chose the computer because it was right here" — and while making screenshots of the website permits this least emotional of painters a rare dose of topicality, Mr. Guyton also treats nytimes.com as a kind of default." The Serpentine Gallery in London described Guyton's work as underscoring, "The studio's potential, not just as a locus for discussion and production, but as a material in and of itself." His exhibition Das New Yorker Atelier in 2017 was a collaboration with Museum Brandhorst in Munich, Germany. Guyton exhibited paintings that depicted artworks in process in his studio on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. Three studio assistants are also depicted in a moment of conversation in the kitchen of his studio. The title of the exhibition makes a reference to a painting by Swiss artist Hans Jakob Oeri entitled
Das Pariser Atelier. In 2018, Guyton made another work that shows studio assistants from behind scrutinizing a work on the wall. The exhibition
Patagonia presumably took its title from the graphics printed on the T-shirt of one of the figures in the painting.
Artist associations Guyton also makes collaborative works with fellow artists
Kelley Walker and Stephen Prina. Along with artists like Walker,
Seth Price and
Tauba Auerbach, Guyton is regarded by some to be at the forefront of a generation that has been reconsidering both
appropriation art and
abstract art through the 21st-century lens of digital technology. He is regarded as one of many contemporary painters revisiting late
Modernism, alongside
Tomma Abts,
Mark Grotjahn,
Eileen Quinlan, Sergei Jensen, and Cheyney Thompson. Guyton and Price operate the Leopard Press, which releases publications of their work and that of their friends. ==Exhibitions==