What Makes Salman Toor’s Work So Powerful?
Salman Toor’s paintings are powerful because he turns queer social life into a fragile world of belonging—one that can feel intimate, glamorous, awkward, exposed, and threatened at the same time.
At first, his paintings can appear charming and immediately accessible. Young men gather in apartments, bars, bedrooms, museums, streets, and immigration offices. They dance, embrace, drink, smoke, scroll through phones, whisper, pose, wait, or collapse into one another after a long night.
The figures are often elongated and delicately awkward. Their wrists bend dramatically. Their noses extend into elegant points. Their bodies appear loose, theatrical, vulnerable, and slightly cartoon-like. Lamps, candles, glasses, phones, clothing, plants, furniture, and clutter give the rooms a lived-in quality.
Most strikingly, many scenes are submerged in green. The green may feel warm and communal, but it can also appear nocturnal, poisonous, artificial, melancholy, or unreal. Toor has described the color as capable of being hot and cold, jewel-like and toxic, with associations ranging from emerald and jade to absinthe and nocturnal light. (The New Yorker)
The beauty of the scenes initially welcomes the viewer. But beneath that beauty lies a more difficult question:
How can queer people build spaces of intimacy and belonging when their visibility can offer freedom in one setting and danger in another?
The Problem Beneath the Work
Toor’s recurring problem is not simply queer identity, friendship, nightlife, or the South Asian diaspora.
A more precise formulation would be:
How can painting create a world in which queer brown men can experience friendship, desire, leisure, tenderness, and self-invention while remaining conscious that the surrounding world may classify, exclude, scrutinize, or threaten them?
His paintings frequently move between two different conditions. Inside apartments, bedrooms, bars, and gatherings, the figures may relax into intimacy. They touch one another, dance, gossip, flirt, drink, dress, and inhabit their bodies with relative freedom. Elsewhere, a figure may stand alone beneath institutional lighting, pass through security, confront police scrutiny, wait in an immigration office, or become isolated within a public space.
The same person can therefore experience visibility in opposing ways:
- Among friends, visibility may create recognition.
- In public, visibility may create exposure.
- In private, the body can become playful and fluid.
- Under institutional observation, that body may become evidence to be inspected.
Toor’s paintings have been understood as reflections on the identities imposed upon and adopted by queer South Asian men living in diaspora. His work places these figures inside social worlds from which they have often been absent in Western painting. (Wikipedia)
The deeper problem is not simply whether the figure is seen. It is: Under whose gaze is the figure being seen, and what does that gaze allow or threaten?
How the Work Creates Pressure
The central pressure in Toor’s work comes from the collision between belonging and precarity. His figures create small worlds in which they can become legible to one another. Friendship, shared cultural experience, queerness, fashion, humor, music, touch, and nightlife form a temporary social shelter. But the shelter never feels completely secure.
- The room may be warm, yet the night exists outside it.
- The embrace may be tender, yet one person may still appear emotionally distant.
- The party may feel liberating, yet someone remains alone at its edge.
- A glowing phone may connect the figure to others while simultaneously isolating him.
- A public display of affection may communicate freedom while increasing exposure.
- An apartment may feel like home, but home itself may be temporary, diasporic, or divided across countries and memories.
This creates a recurring emotional mixture: pleasure and melancholy, intimacy and loneliness, safety and exposure, glamour and awkwardness, desire and shame, community and alienation. The work does not resolve these forces. That is why the scenes feel emotionally alive rather than merely celebratory.
The Green World
Green is one of Toor’s most recognizable formal choices, but it is not merely a signature palette. It creates the psychological climate of the paintings. Green can make an apartment feel enclosed within its own atmosphere, almost detached from ordinary time. It can suggest nightclub lighting, a phone screen, urban darkness, memory, fantasy, intoxication, sickness, safety, or artificial illumination.
Because green is not a conventionally natural color for flesh, it also changes the figures. Skin, clothing, walls, and air begin to share the same emotional field. The people appear partly absorbed into the environment that shelters them.
This gives green several simultaneous functions:
- Green as refuge: The color unifies the room and its inhabitants. Everyone seems to belong to the same nocturnal world. The atmosphere becomes a protective enclosure separating the gathering from the harsher space outside.
- Green as artificiality: The light may feel theatrical, cinematic, or digitally mediated. The figures appear to be living inside a constructed image of freedom rather than a neutral reality.
- Green as intoxication: It can suggest alcohol, nightlife, desire, exhaustion, and the altered emotional state of a late gathering.
- Green as danger: Its poisonous associations prevent the scenes from becoming completely comforting. The shelter may be temporary; the intimacy may remain vulnerable.
- Green as memory: Because Toor often paints from memory and invention rather than directly from life, the unified color can make the scene feel remembered, imagined, or emotionally reconstructed rather than literally documented. He has described turning toward paintings of friends and social life made directly from imagination, without elaborate preliminary planning. (The New Yorker)
The room becomes an emotional climate rather than a neutral location.
Home as a Queer Social Field
Toor’s interiors are crucial because they create spaces where the figures can temporarily loosen the roles demanded by the public world. Inside these rooms, bodies behave differently. A wrist can become delicate, a stance can become theatrical, and men can embrace, recline, whisper, dance, dress elaborately, or appear emotionally vulnerable.
The apartment becomes more than housing; it becomes a place where identity can be rehearsed, discovered, exaggerated, shared, and recognized. This is why his gatherings often feel like chosen-family scenes. The figures do not simply occupy the same room; they produce a social environment in which one another’s gestures become intelligible.
- A pose that might be mocked or disciplined elsewhere becomes ordinary within the gathering.
- A touch that might attract danger outside becomes part of daily intimacy.
- A body that might be classified from a distance becomes familiar to friends.
The room creates permission, but this permission remains conditional. A door, window, phone, uniformed figure, or implied outside world may remind us that the shelter has boundaries. The figures are not free from social pressure; they have constructed a temporary counterworld inside it.
Why the Formal Choices Matter
- Small and intimate scale: Many of Toor’s narrative paintings are relatively small. This suits their emotional world. The scenes do not address the viewer with the monumental authority of a public mural. They invite close looking, like illustrations, diary images, private memories, or paintings discovered in a domestic room. The scale makes the viewer approach, but approaching also makes us aware that we are looking into intimate situations. We become close enough to observe gestures and relationships but remain outside the friendship group.
- Loose brushwork: Toor often allows forms to remain abbreviated, gestural, and slightly unstable. Faces can be recognizable without being tightly rendered. Bodies may stretch or collapse according to emotional rather than anatomical logic. Objects emerge through quick, economical marks. The loose handling prevents the figures from becoming frozen into polished social types. They appear to be forming as we look. This suits a world concerned with self-invention, experimentation, and identities that remain open. The brushwork also softens the boundary between reality and fantasy.
- Elongated bodies: The figures’ bodies often feel narrow, fluid, and delicate. Hands and wrists can become unusually expressive. Limbs bend into graceful or awkward positions. The men may appear physically vulnerable while also possessing theatrical elegance. This anatomy complicates conventional masculinity. The body does not need to appear heavy, stable, muscular, or controlled to possess presence; its fragility becomes expressive. The elongated figure can signal femininity, nervousness, eroticism, uncertainty, refinement, or social exposure.
- Gesture: Toor’s figures communicate through small gestures: a hand touching another person’s face, an arm around a shoulder, a wrist held loosely, a head bowed toward a phone, a figure leaning into conversation, someone dancing while another watches, or a person standing alone in the middle of a crowded room. These gestures often carry more psychological information than facial expression. A gathering may be socially active, yet one gesture can reveal isolation. A casual embrace may carry tenderness and dependency; a dance may communicate freedom but also the desire to be noticed. Gesture becomes the place where belonging is tested.
- Phones and screens: Smartphones appear repeatedly in Toor’s visual world. They connect his scenes to contemporary life, but they are not simply signs of modernity. A phone can function as connection, distraction, private communication, surveillance, social validation, escape from discomfort, evidence of belonging, a portable public image, or a source of emotional separation. A figure at a party may be physically present but psychologically elsewhere through the phone. The device creates another room inside the room, protecting someone from social awkwardness while also preventing deeper contact. This reveals how figures inhabit physical social spaces while simultaneously existing within digital systems of communication, self-presentation, and judgment.
- Clothing: Clothing is one of the ways Toor’s figures construct themselves. Jackets, shorts, scarves, shirts, boots, hats, jewelry, and carefully chosen silhouettes allow the body to become expressive before it speaks. Clothing can communicate desire, subculture, aspiration, femininity, masculinity, theatricality, and belonging. But it can also operate as armor. The right outfit may help a figure enter a social world while making that person more visible to hostile judgment elsewhere. Style therefore carries both pleasure and risk.
- Clutter: The interiors contain lamps, glasses, ashtrays, books, clothing, furniture, plants, cables, candles, and scattered personal belongings. These details make the rooms feel inhabited, but they also operate as evidence of a shared life. The clutter says that people have stayed here. Unlike a polished public image, the room contains residue; the environment preserves the traces of private experience.
The Central Contradiction
The central contradiction in Toor’s work is:
Belonging offers freedom, but it does not eliminate vulnerability.
His figures may be:
- socially connected but privately lonely
- visible but insecure
- glamorous but awkward
- free inside the room but threatened outside it
- intimate but emotionally uncertain
- surrounded by friends but lost in thought
- playful but historically burdened
- at home but still diasporic
- desired but afraid of judgment
- contemporary but painted through inherited European traditions
The contradiction prevents the paintings from becoming uncomplicated images of queer joy. Joy is present, but it exists under pressure. That makes the joy feel more valuable rather than less authentic. The figures are not celebrating because the world has become safe; they create celebration as a temporary space inside an unsafe or uncertain world.
Queer Joy Without Simplification
Contemporary art about marginalized identity can sometimes become constrained by expectations. The artist may be expected to show trauma, oppression, political resistance, or exemplary empowerment. Alternatively, the work may be praised simply for showing joy. Toor avoids both reductions.
His figures experience pleasure, but they are not always triumphant. They experience vulnerability, but they are not reduced to victims. They may be vain, shy, intoxicated, jealous, lonely, flirtatious, self-conscious, affectionate, bored, or emotionally unavailable. That range matters. It allows queer brown figures to possess ordinary psychological complexity. Their lives do not need to become either tragedy or celebration in order to deserve painting. The paintings give them access to the full emotional territory historically granted to figures in genre painting: friendship, foolishness, lust, leisure, boredom, performance, insecurity, and private drama.
Old Masters and New Lives
Toor studied and absorbed European painters such as Van Dyck, Caravaggio, Rubens, Watteau, Manet, and Velázquez. His earlier work often attempted a more direct mastery of their techniques before he developed the looser narrative language associated with his current paintings. (The New Yorker)
That history remains visible. His crowded interiors recall tavern scenes, fêtes galantes, religious gatherings, domestic genre painting, and paintings of fashionable urban life. But the figures occupying these inherited structures are queer, brown, diasporic, contemporary, and connected through smartphones and modern nightlife. The art-historical reference does not function merely as homage; it changes what the older language can hold.
- Watteau’s flirtatious gardens become queer apartments.
- Manet’s modern nightlife becomes a brown queer bar.
- Baroque drama becomes immigration anxiety, romantic longing, or the emotional aftermath of a party.
Toor has also placed contemporary queer figures directly into dialogue with Old Master collections, including through Museum Boys, shown as part of the Frick Collection’s project pairing contemporary queer perspectives with historic paintings. The deeper intervention is that their daily lives become worthy of the tenderness, drama, beauty, and pictorial attention historically reserved for other subjects.
Public Space and Institutional Scrutiny
Not all of Toor’s paintings take place in protective interiors. Some show figures inside immigration, security, museum, police, or bureaucratic environments. These spaces operate according to different visual rules.
- At the party, gesture can remain ambiguous and playful. At the checkpoint, ambiguity becomes suspicious.
- At home, clothing can express identity. Under institutional scrutiny, clothing and appearance may become evidence used to classify the person.
- At a gathering, the figure is seen by people who recognize him. Within bureaucracy, he may be reduced to documentation, nationality, risk, or type.
This creates a sharp distinction:
Recognition sees a person within a relationship. Scrutiny sees a body within a system.
Toor’s work repeatedly moves between those conditions. The private world cannot be fully understood without the public pressure surrounding it. The warmth of the apartment becomes more meaningful because the viewer senses what the figures may confront outside.
Desire and Awkwardness
Toor does not idealize queer intimacy. His figures can be uncertain about how to approach one another. One person may desire another who is distracted. Someone may stand alone while couples embrace. A touch may feel welcome, hesitant, unequal, or unanswered.
This awkwardness is important because desire rarely produces perfect mutual understanding. The body may communicate interest while the face expresses anxiety. A person may perform confidence while fearing rejection. A party may create possibility while intensifying awareness of loneliness. Toor makes desire social rather than purely erotic. It involves status, timing, confidence, belonging, recognition, and self-image:
- Who is being watched?
- Who is wanted?
- Who appears comfortable?
- Who is trying to look comfortable?
- Who is included in the group?
- Who remains on its edge?
The paintings turn the social field into an emotional hierarchy that the viewer must slowly decode.
The Viewer’s Position
Toor often places the viewer just outside the circle of intimacy. We can see into the room, but the figures are usually absorbed in one another, their phones, their drinks, their thoughts, or their private dramas. This creates several possible viewer roles: guest, outsider, voyeur, friend, witness, potential threat, someone remembering a similar night, or someone excluded from this social world.
The paintings do not establish one stable position. A viewer who recognizes the experience may feel invited, while another may feel like an intruder. The work reveals that belonging is relational. It depends partly on what knowledge, assumptions, desires, and histories the viewer brings into the room. The painting asks:
Do you see these figures as people living ordinary emotional lives, or as representatives of identities you believe need explanation?
The answer implicates the viewer.
The Visual World Toor Has Built
Across his practice, Toor has developed a recognizable lexicon:
- queer brown men
- green nocturnal interiors
- apartments, bedrooms, bars, streets, museums, and checkpoints
- elongated limbs and expressive wrists
- pointed noses and delicately constructed faces
- phones, lamps, glasses, candles, clothing, and clutter
- friendship groups and chosen-family gatherings
- figures dancing, embracing, waiting, scrolling, or withdrawing
- small gestures carrying emotional tension
- old-master compositions transformed by contemporary queer life
- public scrutiny contrasted with private freedom
- glamour mixed with social awkwardness
- intimacy mixed with loneliness
- memory and fantasy replacing strict documentation
These elements produce a world where belonging is assembled through atmosphere, friendship, style, touch, memory, and shared recognition. But this world remains vulnerable. Its fragility is part of its beauty.
What Artists Can Learn
The lesson is not to imitate Toor’s green palette, elongated figures, queer parties, art-historical references, or intimate interiors. The lesson is to understand how he makes belonging visible as both refuge and risk:
- Color can construct a social world: A dominant color can do more than establish mood. It can make people, bodies, and environments feel as though they belong to the same emotional climate.
- A room can become a counterworld: An interior can create temporary freedom from the expectations and dangers of public space.
- Belonging should not erase contradiction: Community can provide recognition while still containing jealousy, loneliness, awkwardness, dependence, and uncertainty.
- Small gestures can reveal social pressure: A wrist, glance, touch, lean, or bowed head may show who feels secure, who desires recognition, and who remains outside the group.
- Style can be both pleasure and armor: Clothing and pose may express identity while protecting the person from insecurity or misrecognition.
- Contemporary objects should carry psychological meaning: A phone can become connection, withdrawal, validation, performance, or a private world within a public room.
- Art history becomes useful when new lives alter it: The lesson is not to insert contemporary figures into old compositions mechanically. It is to ask what inherited forms can now be made to express.
- Joy becomes deeper when its precarity remains visible: The work does not need to choose between celebration and danger. It can show why celebration becomes necessary under pressure.
The larger lesson is this:
Belonging becomes powerful when the work shows both the shelter it creates and the vulnerability it cannot completely remove.
Salman Toor’s paintings build intimate green worlds in which people recognize one another, invent themselves, and briefly loosen the identities imposed on them from outside. The rooms glow because they provide refuge; they feel fragile because refuge is never guaranteed.





