Jim Watt is an American artist, producer and architect based in Asbury Park, New Jersey. Watt’s paintings and drawings are an obsessive exploration of space, form and material, a context that marries his work as an architect. At Princeton University, where Watt earned his Masters in Architecture, teachers Michael Graves and Enrique Miralles espoused the Renaissance notion that architects must paint, draw, and sculpt to fully realize their ideas. Form, space, material, texture, color, and light are shared languages that transcend medium. Watt’s work as an artist is the opportunity to work without a structured, planned intention, instead playing in the tension between thought and instinct: discovery through the process of making.
As a producer, set designer and lighting designer, Watt has brought to the stage two productions of RED by John Logan and two productions of ART by Yasmina Reza. In 2002 he wrote and produced the short film 1000w that was directed by Danny Clinch. The film debuted at the Apollo theater in New York.
Watt has a body of built buildings spanning North America, and his art is in private collections across North America and Europe. His work has been featured in Architectural Digest, Dwell Magazine, and The New York Times.
As a producer, set designer and lighting designer, Watt has brought to the stage two productions of RED by John Logan and two productions of ART by Yasmina Reza. In 2002 he wrote and produced the short film 1000w that was directed by Danny Clinch. The film debuted at the Apollo theater in New York.
Watt has a body of built buildings spanning North America, and his art is in private collections across North America and Europe. His work has been featured in Architectural Digest, Dwell Magazine, and The New York Times.