Oscar-winning actor Adrien Brody unveils art show in New York

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Adrien Brody and his mother Sylvia Plachy at his solo exhibition at Eden Gallery in New York, on May 31, 2025. In his first art exhibition in nearly a decade, the actor and painter draws from the frenetic energy of his youth, and from the empathy of his mother, the photographer Sylvia Plachy. (Sam Hellmann/The New York Times)

Adrien Brody and his mother Sylvia Plachy at his solo exhibition at Eden Gallery in New York, on May 31.

PHOTO: SAM HELLMANN/NYTIMES

Rachel Sherman

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NEW YORK – “I’m a little in a daze,” actor Adrien Brody said recently, the skin around his eyes slightly crinkled, but his gaze soft and present.

He had been up since 5am and had spent most of his day crouched on the ground at Eden Gallery in Manhattan, putting the finishing touches on his collages ahead of the next evening’s opening of his latest solo exhibition, Made In America.

The floors and walls were covered with canvases, themselves covered with old newspaper advertisements, erratic splashes of graffiti and darkly rendered cartoon characters. Donald Duck, Mickey Mouse and Marilyn Monroe were in attendance. As were the Hamburglar and a toy soldier.

In a nearby corner was a gum wall, soon to be covered in wads of chewing gum straight from the mouths of attendees in an interactive “expression of rebellion and decay”, according to the wall text.

Adrien Brody, the Oscar-winning actor, is also Adrien Brody, the impassioned painter, is also Adrien Brody, the beats-mixing sound artiste. Those mediums converge in a collection of more than 30 works.

Accompanied by Brody’s soundscapes, the show features large mixed-media art in what he calls an autobiographical display of the gritty New York of his youth, and the culture of violence and intolerance today. It is an approach that has been met with some derision both in the art press and on social media.

Made In America, on view until June 28, also includes photographs of and by his mother, acclaimed Hungarian-American photographer Sylvia Plachy – a role model for Brody, who was never formally trained in visual art.

A gum wall by Adrien Brody for his art exhibition, Made In America.

PHOTO: SAM HELLMANN/NYTIMES

It has been nearly a decade since Brody, 52, last showed his work publicly, at Art Basel Miami. So, why now? “I’m an unemployed actor at the moment,” he said with a half smile.

Though it is difficult to picture Brody as unemployed, especially when his artworks sell for six figures, this is not untrue. The last film Brody shot was in 2023 – The Brutalist, for which he won the best actor Oscar in 2025 – and nothing definite is lined up next.

“I know that if I don’t do it now, I won’t do it for another long period of time,” he said of the show. “It’s kind of time to let it go.”

Adrien Brody’s solo exhibition Made In America at New York’s Eden Gallery is his first art exhibition in nearly a decade.

PHOTO: SAM HELLMANN/NYTIMES

Brody had been steadily working on his collages for the past decade. In the fallow periods, years-long stretches when he was not landing the acting roles he yearned for, he turned inwards and painted.

The method in all of his mediums, he said, is a combination of layering – be it the incorporation of studied hand mannerisms for his character in The Pianist (2002) or the added thumps for a recorded track – and peeling back, such as using chemicals to degrade paint for a visual work.

Brody, who credits his mother as his greatest artistic inspiration, grew up accompanying Plachy on photo expeditions as she chronicled the city’s beauty and chaos on assignments for The Village Voice, where she worked for 30 years.

“He came along and he saw the world,” said Plachy, 82.

In her darkroom, set up in their home attic in Queens, they would talk to each other through the curtain while she developed her photographs, moving the images from tray to tray, swirling them around in Dektol.

“He still associates me with those bad chemicals,” she said, laughing.

Adrien Brody and his mother Sylvia Plachy at the gallery.

PHOTO: SAM HELLMANN/NYTIMES

His father, Elliot Brody, was also a painter, but focused on his career as a teacher. It was onto Plachy’s discarded photo prints that Brody began painting as a child.

As a teenager, Brody attended Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts for drama, after being rejected for visual arts.

“It was a good thing, obviously,” he said. “I’d definitely be a starving artist, most likely, if I didn’t have an acting career. So, it’s funny how that happened.”

In Made In America, many works feature a cartoon character – Lisa Simpson or Yosemite Sam or Bugs Bunny – brandishing a weapon. It is a depiction of the violence Brody said he grew up with culturally: an American diet of toy guns, video games and McDonald’s.

In Brody’s vermin series, oversized black-and-white images of rats appear to pixelate behind street art tags.

People are “either grossed out by them or they are antagonistic towards them”, Brody said of the scores of rats in New York City. “And I always felt like, ‘Why doesn’t anybody see what they’re going through?’ Weirdly, I really kind of feel for them.”

Rats feature in Adrien Brody’s artworks.

PHOTO: SAM HELLMANN/NYTIMES

That compassion, he said, comes from his mother. Plachy’s sensitivity towards animals rubbed off on him. So much so that he has had a pet rat – twice. The first he bought as a child and then gifted to a friend. The second, a few years ago, belonged to the daughter of his girlfriend, designer-actress Georgina Chapman.

“They’re forced to kind of hide and scurry about and forage for themselves,” he said. “And people are nasty to them and that always bothered me.”

That message, though, appears to be muddied in its reception.

“Brody is trying to do something with mice and rats, but there’s no attempt to marshal this imagery towards contemporary critique,” professor of art history Claire Bishop at the CUNY Graduate Center said in an e-mail, calling his collages “too pretty and too even” and “lacking bite”.

“To say they look like AI-generated images resulting from search terms ‘1990s LES graffiti’, ‘Americana’ and ‘Disney nostalgia’ would be too generous,” she added. “What they actually resemble is the kind of sanitised street art that’s sold on 53rd Street outside MoMA or on the sidewalk in SoHo – work aimed at tourists seeking an arty yet unchallenging New York souvenir.”

And viewers on social media have not taken too kindly to Brody’s painterly side. In May, one of his creations, a blue-eyeshadowed Marilyn Monroe, the Hollywood sign poking out behind a puff of her blonde hair, sold at the amfAR Gala Cannes for US$425,000 (S$546,600). The painting became a source of mockery online, and drew criticism for being derivative.

Adrien Brody preparing for his art show at the gallery Gallery.

PHOTO: SAM HELLMANN/NYTIMES

But Brody has his defenders.

“He’s real,” said Eden Gallery’s chief executive Guy Klimovsky. “He is himself.”

“Yes, people will come because it’s him,” he added, “but they will forget. Because when I see an artwork, without knowing who made it, the artworks are rich. They’re interesting. They have a story connection to the US, the story of the US, to the icon of the US.”

It is all part of being an artist, his mother said. “I think when you stick your neck out into the world, you’ll have good and bad comments and that’s the risk of it,” Plachy said.

Sitting outside the gallery the day before the opening, Brody looked down at his hands, covered in acrylic paint.

“It’s a lot of pressure to reveal this,” he said. “I’ve literally been hiding the works.”

“Hiding maybe isn’t the right word,” he added, “but working quietly for a very long time and not showing, intentionally, to kind of develop this and do it at my pace. And so this is kind of ripping a Band-Aid off.” NYTIMES

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