Painting: Portraits
"These drawings and paintings of faces are his most amazing achievements ...revealing his uncanny capacity to penetrate the psychological depths of personality and yet leave the subject's human integrity intact".
Fay Zwicky, Poet 1993
"Louis Kahan's portraits of Australian writers stand tall in the great tradition of intellectual homage: direct, well observed, economical, even brusque. Their confident sketchiness is a tribute to the informality and freedom of the sitter, while the robust forms express the thinking fortitude of a mind that works a theme from fugitive ideas to monumental works of literature."
Robert Nelson, art critic, The Age, 2002
"Portrait painting at its best, using analysis and imagination, is possibly the most difficult branch of art, because each of us has a mask. Trying to penetrate to the reality behind the mask is the interesting thing"
Louis Kahan
Louis Kahan, Alan Marshall, 1966 enamel on composite board
Louis Kahan, Arthur Boyd, 1972, oil on canvas on marine ply
Louis Kahan, Mary Gilmour, 1960, oil on canvas on board
Louis Kahan, Rose Skinner, 1947, oil on canvas
Louis Kahan, Robert Hughes, 1963, mixed media on composite board
Louis Kahan, Patrick White, 1962, oil & synthetic polymer on composite board
Louis Kahan, Robert Dickerson, 1963, mixed media on composite board
Louis Kahan, Self Portrait, 1949, oil on paper
Louis Kahan, Self Portrait Through a Cracked Glass, 1998, oil on canvas on marine ply