Simon Lee Robson

Masterpiece Studies | 2025

Re-engaging the visual and spiritual architecture of the Renaissance and Baroque, Simon Lee Robson's Masterpiece Studies | 2025 is a disciplined and deeply considered body of work that enters into direct dialogue with the Old Masters. Rather than imitation, these paintings represent an act of confrontation, with composition, theology, light, and human vulnerability, examined through the hand of a contemporary painter committed to technical and spiritual intensity.

Rooted in sustained study, the collection investigates how sacred narrative can still command presence in a secular age. Each work is approached not as replication, but as inquiry: into the mechanics of transcendence, the structure of divine drama, and the enduring authority of classical form.

5 artworks

Discipline and Devotion

Robson’s practice is grounded in rigorous technical examination of Christian masterworks. Deeply informed by Caravaggio’s psychological realism and Sebastiano del Piombo’s monumental composition, he engages with their paintings as living systems, dissecting their balance, chromatic weight, anatomical precision, and orchestration of light.

Through this process, he refines not only technique but conviction. The resulting works assert a painterly control that is both analytical and reverent, disciplined yet emotionally charged. They stand as contemporary affirmations of the Old Masters’ compositional intelligence and spiritual gravity.

Alongside focused studies of specific historical works, Robson has produced original compositions forged within this classical language. These paintings do not look backward; they advance the tradition through renewed authority in structure, light, and narrative tension.

Balancing homage with innovation, Robson refines his craft through rigorous artistic and spiritual inquiry.

Caravaggio: Light as Revelation

Caravaggio’s radical chiaroscuro and unfiltered humanity serve as a foundational axis for the collection. The Supper at Emmaus and The Deposition are rigorously re-examined, their dramatic architectures reconstructed through layered pigment and carefully calibrated contrast.

Rather than copying surface detail, Robson interrogates the emotional engineering beneath the paint, the compression of bodies, the directional force of light, the charged stillness before revelation. The resulting canvases possess a density and material gravity that commands physical presence in space.

Light is not decorative; it is theological. It divides, exposes, redeems.

If Caravaggio commands through shadow and gesture, Sebastiano del Piombo resonates through colour, form, and monumental presence.

Sebastiano del Piombo: Monumentality and Flesh

In dialogue with Sebastiano del Piombo, Robson turns toward colour as structure and anatomy as spiritual vessel. The Raising of Lazarus becomes a study in chromatic depth and compositional weight, where flesh is rendered with sculptural authority and gesture carries psychological consequence.

Sebastiano’s synthesis of Venetian colourism and Roman monumentality is not merely referenced but reasserted. Through careful layering and attention to surface tension, Robson reconstructs the equilibrium between human fragility and divine intervention that defines Sebastiano’s legacy.

Together, these masters form the foundation of a collection both spiritually charged and visually commanding.

A Contemporary Sacred Dialogue

Masterpiece Studies | 2025 transcends academic exercise. It is an extended meditation on continuity, on whether the visual language that once shaped Western spirituality can still move, confront, and elevate the contemporary viewer.

These large-scale original acrylic works on canvas and linen possess significant physical and visual presence. Built through deliberate layering and sustained painterly control, they assert themselves architecturally within a room.

Their scale, compositional discipline, and material density position them not as studies in the diminutive sense, but as substantial works in their own right.

For collectors, this body of work represents more than homage. It offers entry into a serious painter’s investigation of faith, legacy, and the enduring mechanics of transcendence through paint.

Rather than nostalgia, these works assert reclamation.

About

Simon Lee Robson

Originally from the quiet wilds of rural North Yorkshire, England, and now based in the leafy suburbs of North West London, Robson is known for his dreamlike, thought-provoking imagery that invites viewers to explore new dimensions of perception and imagination.

Robson’s work features in private collections both in the United Kingdom and internationally.

His most recent collections at Arte Delux include Canvas Vault Part 3 | 2025 and Masterpiece Studies | 2025.

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