Tyston Ritter will exhibit his paintings for the first time next week at the SPRING/BREAK Art Show.
Tyson Ritter—the All-American Rejects frontman, actor, and multidisciplinary artist—will exhibit his paintings for the first time in New York next week at the SPRING/BREAK Art Show. Sharing a booth with comedian Nick Thune, Ritter will present “Paradise 1985,” nine emotionally charged works that explore memory, identity, and the raw intensity of youth culture in the American Southwest, where he was born and raised. Layering bold strokes, color, and form, Ritter’s paintings evoke a space of potential—moments when the future is uncertain but full of promise. Inspired by the intimacy and emotional depth of photographers like Richard Avedon and Nan Goldin, Ritter captures fleeting vulnerability and strength with visceral urgency. “I strive to capture the raw energy of human expression—where the blemish is beauty, and the unseen find their way out of the dusty corners of American culture,” says Ritter. “Painting is my way of distilling emotion into something tangible, something that lingers.” Born in Stillwater, Oklahoma in 1984, Ritter rose to prominence in the early 2000s with a string of chart-topping hits that helped define a generation. In parallel with his music career, he has built an eclectic filmography in both independent cinema and major television. Just this month, The All-American Rejects returned with “Sandbox,” their first new single in over 13 years—one that immediately went viral following a surprise house show at USC.