Beautiful.
Posts by Scott Listfield
Oh! Nicely done! Thanks so much!
Didn’t they kind of burn down the White House in THIS universe? Do they end up doing it in all universes? 🤔
Thanks so much! Really appreciate how consistently you support my work!
But hey, there’s a lot of nostalgia going around right now for 2016. So grab a Blue Bird print and remember the simpler times where social media could be fun and not societally corrosive.
harmanprojects.myshopify.com/products/sco...
But the last job I had before I made that transition? I worked for Twitter. For almost three years. This was well before Elon, and I ended up there somewhat by accident. But I exited that world and entered the art world, full time, and up until now hadn’t spent much time looking back.
Not everyone knows this about me, but I had a full time job, working as a designer, for 15 years while trying to get my art career up and running. I’ve now been a full time artist for a while, and I feel tremendously lucky that I get to do what I love every day.
This was part of my recent show Extinction Stories at Harman Projects in San Francisco, which was largely about my shifting ideas around technology and whether it’s really been such a good thing in our lives. This one in particular had extra meaning for me.
Does anyone else remember Twitter? I’ve got a new print release today, my first one of 2026. It’s called Blue Bird and you can grab one of them at harmanprojects.myshopify.com/products/sco...
Painting showing an astronaut in front of a rearing horse, with the planet Saturn setting on the horizon. Both look towards the right.
Year of the horse y’all.
Scott Listfield (b. 1976) Citgo, 2022 Oil on canvas 40 x 20 inches (101.6 x 50.8 cm) Signed and dated on the reverse: Scott Listfield 2022
WOW!
I just got this print from @scottlistfield.bsky.social and look who is hanging out!
Nice! Little guys for the win. Appreciate it!
Ha! Awesome! So glad you got one of those big guys!
Here’s another one from my latest show Island Stories at Antler Gallery. This show is about a journey to the north, an island country, getting lost on roads with no one other than the sheep to guide my way, and tracing the footsteps of Vikings using modern means.
www.antlerpdx.com/collections/...
I often like to write long stories to go along with my work but I’m pretty sure this one doesn’t need a ton of explanation. You can find it at the @thinkspace-art.bsky.social booth at the Scope Art Show happening this week in Miami.
I don’t do this often, but a group of rare prints recently made their way back to me from a collector going through a rough time. 50% of the proceeds will go to Feeding America, because times are tough for lots of us right now. Check them out here - www.ebay.com/sch/i.html?i...
Oh! Interesting! 🤔 and thanks! Really appreciate it!
Ah! That’s awesome! What was the interview about?
Haha! Everybody loves that guy!
New print! My ode to everything Boston, my home town. Get Kenmore now at www.houseofroulx.com/collections/...
Ha! Thanks! Rooting for you to find more wall space 😀
“Women don’t like the vehicle”
Those Beavis and Butthead pins though.
Awesome! Thanks so much. Glad you got one!
Hey thanks! Appreciate the support and kind words!
Hopefully it’s on the PBS app! I bought it in DVD forever ago because I liked it so much. At the time, unlike anything else on TV. This new version had a very similar format, but the PBS one had a segment where they revisit the families after they re-enter modern life and it was really bittersweet.
If you haven’t seen it, and if it’s streamable, I highly recommend the original Frontier House, which aired on PBS like 20 years ago. This new version is definitely based on that one. Both are pretty good!
I decided to make a version of his iconic building Habitat 67, as it might appear sometime in the far distant future. It’s been overgrown by plants, inhabited by deer, and the nearby waters have begun to encroach. But as an icon of Modernist Architecture, it still stands recognizable.
For a long time I lived in Somerville, MA, right down the street from his offices. I would often walk by there and imagine what cool stuff was happening inside. It inspired a younger version of me, knowing incredible stuff was happening in my neighborhood.