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Glen Baxter dead : the British master of absurd humor dies at 81

photo portrait de Glen Baxter

Glen Baxter has died. The British artist, known for his unique drawings blending absurd humor and language disruption, passed away on March 29, 2026, in London at the age of 81. A singular figure in contemporary art, he leaves behind a body of work that constantly challenged meaning and perception.

Glen Baxter, Old red had an almost infallible knack for sniffing out an authentic Rothko canvas, 2022. Photo : Pauline Assathiany Courtesy Semiose, Paris

A practice built on derailing meaning

At first glance, Glen Baxter’s drawings appear simple. Familiar scenes unfold: cowboys, explorers, golfers frozen in time. Then comes the caption — slightly too literary, subtly out of place — and everything shifts.

What emerges is not just humor, but a destabilization of meaning itself. The image no longer illustrates, the text no longer explains. Between the two, a gap opens — one that invites the viewer to rethink what they see.

Baxter described this effect as a “frisson”: a moment when understanding falters, yet something still resonates.

There were times when I began to think I might just be in the wrong profession, 2010
Encre et crayon sur papier / Ink and pencil on paper 77,5 × 57 cm — 30 1/2 × 22 7/16 inches Photo : Pauline Assathiany

Absurdity as method

Born in 1944 in Leeds, Glen Baxter trained at the Leeds College of Art before developing a distinctive artistic language in the 1970s. His time in New York, particularly within the poetic circles of St. Mark’s Church, shaped his deep engagement with language.

Often associated with surrealism, Baxter’s work goes beyond dreamlike imagery. It operates through carefully constructed tensions between text and image, where meaning is constantly deferred or disrupted.

Things were not working out quite as Hank had hoped, 2016 Encre et crayon sur papier / Ink and pencil on paper 79 × 57 cm — 31 1/8 × 22 7/16 inches Photo : Pauline Assathiany Courtesy Semiose, Paris

A singular place in contemporary art

Neither purely an illustrator nor strictly a conceptual artist, Glen Baxter occupied a unique position between disciplines.

His drawings appeared in major publications such as The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, The Observer, and Le Monde, while his works entered the collections of leading institutions including the Tate, the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), and the Centre Pompidou.

This dual presence — both editorial and institutional — contributed to a rare balance between accessibility and intellectual depth.

There, as usual, was Edelson, delivering his post-structuralist analysis of the modern
novel to the privileged few, 1982 Encre et crayon sur papier / Ink and pencil
on paper 35 × 25 cm — 13 3/4 × 9 13/16 inches Photo : Pauline Assathiany Courtesy Semiose, Paris

Working until the end

In the weeks leading up to his death, Glen Baxter was still preparing an exhibition at Semiose gallery in Paris, scheduled from May 23 to June 20, 2026. The exhibition will go ahead as planned, now serving as a tribute to his work.

A book-length interview with curator Bernard Blistène will also be published, offering further insight into his artistic approach.

Following the royal decree to ban deer hunting in Sherwood, Robin and his men
switch to tofu, 2022 Encre et crayon sur papier / Ink and pencil on paper
79 × 57,5 cm — 31 1/8 × 22 5/8 inches Photo : Pauline Assathiany Courtesy Semiose, Paris

A legacy of instability

Glen Baxter’s work is not just a style or a form of humor. It is an experience — one that exposes the fragility of language and the instability of images.

At a time when meaning is often expected to be immediate and transparent, Baxter’s work reminds us that ambiguity can be productive — and that in this space of uncertainty, a different kind of freedom can emerge.

FAQ – Glen Baxter

🔹 Is Glen Baxter dead ?

Yes, Glen Baxter died on March 29, 2026, in London at the age of 81.

🔹Who was Glen Baxter, the British artist ?

Glen Baxter was a British artist known for his drawings combining absurd humor with unexpected and disjointed text.

🔹 What is Glen Baxter known for ?

He is known for creating a tension between image and language, producing an absurd and thought-provoking effect.

🔹 Where can you see Glen Baxter’s work ?

His works are held in major institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), Tate, and Centre Pompidou, as well as in galleries.