• "Art is not about the right color on the right surface; it's about synthesizing one's experience."

    Todd Murphy, 1989

  • Murphy's paintings, although frequently tragic, are not pessimistic. They convey what Spinoza would call a "mature" sense of reality. The 17th century philosopher advised a life without the comforting illusions of conventional society. Men and women can only be truly free, he insisted, if they face both their own limitations and the purposeless nature of the universe.

    Bradford R. Collins

    Todd Murphy's Heroic Subjectivism

    McKissick Museum Catalog, Columbia, SC, January 13, 1991

  • Ultimately, what distinguishes Murphy from most of his American contemporaries is his commitment to the human- not the American—condition”

    —Dr. Bradford R. Collins

    Todd Murphy's Heroic Subjectivism

    McKissick Museum Catalog, Columbia, SC, January 13, 1991

  • What differentiates Murphy’s views on the complexity of human thought and behavior from those of his Postmodern contemporaries, such as Salle or Borofsky, is the thematic integrity of his works.

    —Dr. Bradford R. Collins

    Todd Murphy's Heroic Subjectivism

    McKissick Museum Catalog, Columbia, SC, January 13, 1991

  • Unlike the nearly unconnected themes juxtaposed in their oeuvre, those in Murphy's works, although they lack certainty and closure, nonetheless cohere. Murphy's work is marked by a kind of sincerity rarely seen since the 1950s

    —Dr. Bradford R. Collins

    Todd Murphy's Heroic Subjectivism

    McKissick Museum Catalog, Columbia, SC, January 13, 1991

  • Unlike the work of so many of his contemporaries, which is either cool or passive, Murphy's presentation manifests a passionate engagement with the thorny issues of his work, a positive, active immersion in them.

    —Dr. Bradford R. Collins

    Todd Murphy's Heroic Subjectivism

    McKissick Museum Catalog, Columbia, SC, January 13, 1991

  • Think Big, The State, Columbia, SC, Section F, By Jeffrey Day, January 6, 1991, pp.1,4. Murphy Art Hot, Won't Burn Out, The State, by Jeffrey Day, Columbia, SC, February 3, 1991

  • Among the words that may appear on some of his canvases is "ARNT”. This play on the contraction "aren't," he explains, "is for me a negation of what art has become."

    Joseph Samuel Perrin, 1923 - 2014 Professor Emeritus, and the founder and former Chairman of the School of Art and Design at Georgia State University,

  • Once the writing has been introduced onto the painting's surface, it is invariably obscured or woven into the fabric of the large pictorial idea.

    Joseph Samuel Perrin, 1923 - 2014 Professor Emeritus, and the founder and former Chairman of the School of Art and Design at Georgia State University,

  • Yet the informal calligraphy seems to further support and identify with the single figure in a context that feels as primordial as the drawings on the walls of the ancient caves and, at the same time, as sophisticated and timely as a billboard.

    Joseph Samuel Perrin, 1923 - 2014 Professor Emeritus, and the founder and former Chairman of the School of Art and Design at Georgia State University,

  • The words may simply be notes to himself or they may be from any source that is available if the message seems cogent. They may even be written in Russian.

    Joseph Samuel Perrin, 1923 - 2014 Professor Emeritus, and the founder and former Chairman of the School of Art and Design at Georgia State University,

  • A structural element that is virtually always included in Murphy's paintings is "writing," which he uses to symbolize his thoughts about the human condition and art.

    Joseph Samuel Perrin, 1923 - 2014 Professor Emeritus, and the founder and former Chairman of the School of Art and Design at Georgia State University,

  • Among the words that may appear on some of his canvases is "ARNT”. This play on the contraction "aren't," he explains, "is for me a negation of what art has become."

    Joseph Samuel Perrin, 1923 - 2014 Professor Emeritus, and the founder and former Chairman of the School of Art and Design at Georgia State University,

  • Once the writing has been introduced onto the painting's surface, it is invariably obscured or woven into the fabric of the large pictorial idea.

    Joseph Samuel Perrin, 1923 - 2014 Professor Emeritus, and the founder and former Chairman of the School of Art and Design at Georgia State University,

  • Yet the informal calligraphy seems to further support and identify with the single figure in a context that feels as primordial as the drawings on the walls of the ancient caves and, at the same time, as sophisticated and timely as a billboard.

    Joseph Samuel Perrin, 1923 - 2014 Professor Emeritus, and the founder and former Chairman of the School of Art and Design at Georgia State University,