l: Matisse painting of woman looking at book on green table leaning her head on hand, red and white vertical striped wallpaper behind her. r: pencil/charcoal sketch by Louis Fratino of young man leaning in similar fashion on window sill looking outside with man behind him.
L: "Girl Reading" by Matisse; R: "Naples" by Fratino.

MICA graduate Louis Fratino will be featured at the Baltimore Museum of Art (BMA) soon, when the Maryland native opens his exhibition, โ€œFratino and Matisse: To See This Light Againโ€. The exhibition will be on view at the BMA from March 11โ€“Sept. 6, 2026.

โ€œFratino and Matisseโ€ will feature approximately 30 works by the contemporary artist, Fratino, and the French master, Matisse, 15 works from each. The exhibition will demonstrate the influence the latter has on the former and include iconic paintings, drawings, interiors, still lifes, and self-portraits. There will be dynamic pairings and groups to convey an intergenerational dialogue between the two artists.

Among the works will be two new paintings by Fratinoโ€“ โ€œSeptember flowersโ€ and โ€œStudio nudeโ€โ€“ and other works that have not been exhibited before. โ€œFratino and Matisseโ€ will be part of a suite of Matisse exhibitions opening at the BMA the same month, including โ€œMatisse and Martinique: Portraits and Poetryโ€ and โ€œMatisse in Vence: The Stations of the Crossโ€.

painting of vase of flowers on table with chair to the right and person to left
“September flowers” by Louis Fratino will be on view at the BMA’s “Fratino and Matisse :To See This Light Again” Exhibition.

Fratinoโ€™s works center his lived experience and his reverence for the traditions of European and American modernists. His art often depicts warm domestic spaces and intimate portraits that spotlight queer love, desire and beauty. He has been described as โ€œa star of the Venice Biennaleโ€ where his work was featured in 2024, and his work has been in many museum and gallery shows. At auctions his paintings routinely fetch six figures.

Born in Annapolis, Maryland, and educated at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), Fratino spent considerable time with the BMAโ€™s extensive Matisse collection. The BMA houses the worldโ€™s largest public collection of works by Matisse, with more than 1,600 paintings, drawings, prints, and illustrated books.

Fratino was especially interested in Matisseโ€™s mastery of line, color, and atmosphere, and it significantly influences his own work. Where Matisse portrayed the idealized and abstract female nude form, Fratino focused on the male body, using his artistic gaze to expand the perspective of what constitutes beauty in a nude form.

collage of two paintings;(l) Matisse painting of nude woman lying on the floor (r) Fratino painting of nude man lying face down on a red lounger
L: Odalisque Green Sash by Matisse; R: Red nude by Fratino.

โ€œItโ€™s the idea that art manifests a kind of attention or a vision for your life, that it can be a beautiful life despite certain circumstances that may be happening around you,โ€ Fratino said. โ€œIn Matisseโ€™s case, he lived through the First and Second World Wars. Painting can confirm that life is beautiful and that itโ€™s worth looking at. I do feel that it gives back to me that way: I see my surroundings and my garden or the people Iโ€™m around differently because Iโ€™ve had the opportunity to paint them. Thatโ€™s a feeling I get from Matisse. By keeping one eye on art history and one eye on life, I leave room for myself to enter the conversation.โ€

Fratino chose each of the Matisse works in the exhibition, selecting many produced in Nice, France in which the artist emphasized light-filled interiors and female models at leisure.

The exhibition is co-curated by Virginia Anderson, senior curator of American Art and department head, American Painting & Sculpture and Decorative Arts, and Katy Rothkopf, the Anne and Ben Cone Memorial Director of the Ruth R. Marder Center for Matisse Studies and senior curator of European Painting and Sculpture.

Amy Sherald is also a former MICA student, and her work is currently on display at the BMA. Her exhibition, โ€œAmy Sherald: American Sublimeโ€ set an attendance record for the BMA, which is running the exhibition through April 5, 2026. As of Jan 20, 52, 597 people had seen the exhibition or purchased tickets since its opening on Nov. 2, 2025.

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