“What lies behind us and what lies before us are tiny matters compared to what lies within us.” — Ralph Waldo Emerson
Nina Nielsen has sand. She takes it from her summers on Nantucket and puts it in her paintings. It grounds her. It grounds her work.
Nina Nielsen;VOLGA (2012-2013); 24 x 18 inches; oil and sand on canvas |
Since July 29th the Gleason Library in Carlisle, Massachusetts has been happily hanging an exhibit of Nina Nielsen's canvasses within the library space. The Gleason doesn't have a dedicated gallery space, instead hanging pieces throughout the various exhibition opportunities that the library affords. It is better this way, creating an integrated experience. Sometimes the paintings come out and greet the visitor in an open and surround viewing space, other times they hold a post, and still other times they surprise us among the stacks. Uncanny how these paintings do the impossible in this space; they bring the magic and mystery and spirit of their personal vision to bear. Amazing! They actually tune in to and fine tune the Gleason. They have that kind of strength of aura; they inhabit the library!
The paintings individually are in full possession of themselves. They stand on their own two feet, with a heartbeat and a soul and a brain waving at us! They have that sense of themselves; that command of their own ship, their own destiny; their own sphere of influence. Each one different, each one a surprise. These are modestly sized canvasses, rarely bigger than a bread box, with what appears to be no more than a few colors, but they surprise with a great deal of color and they play remarkably large, larger than life.
Nina Nielsen; COUPLER (2010-2013); 24x18inches; oil and sand on canvas |
These paintings make a lot of noise too, a lot of sound, a lot of music! You can hear the wind blow or the night howl. One just makes a clicking sound. Another rustles in the breeze. One makes the sound of morning sun. They have that kind of texture; that kind of center.
Nina Nielsen; SANCTUM (2011-2012); 20x16inches; oil and sand on canvas |
For more than four decades, from the 1960s to the 2000s, Nina Nielsen's gallery on Newbury Street in Boston was the warmest, most intense, most powerful and inspirational art experience north of Manhattan. It was nothing short of a beacon, hands down the one art oasis for anyone who loved painting. The artists' works she showed were the company she kept. Her gallery was their home and the rest of us fortunate enough to cross that threshold considered it a home away from home.
Nina Nielsen; VEIL (2010-2012); 30x24inches; oil and sand on canvas |
It is almost impossible to not feel the presence of these other artists in Nina Nielsen's paintings. They pull up a chair, sprawl out on a sofa, poke around in the refrigerator, or just pace the room. There's Porfirio DiDonna of course, John Walker, Joan Snyder, Bill Jensen, Jake Berthot, and Sam Messer, just to name a few. Messer is noisy, Walker fatherly, Jensen grounded, Snyder steely, Berthot attentive, and DiDonna soulful. Interestingly enough the artist with whom she shares the truest kindred spirit is Forrest Bess.The sound aspect is only the first clue. He is her real soulmate! Her artist/spirit/friend/companion/guide. Like Bess, Nielsen shares that knowledge that painting is so much more than a picture, that it can do anything, even heal!
Nina Nielsen; TEMPLAR (2011-2013); 24x18 inches; oil and sand on canvas |
Suffice it to say that there is an "of"ness and "is"ness thing going on in all of painting all of the time. It is a very fine line. Painters tend to lean one way or the other. Nothing wrong with that. Nielsen and Bess share the same ground, or same sand(Bess lived in a converted boat on the Gulf of Mexico), of "is." Being there. A painting that "is" something more than "of" something. And just what the "is" is, is what it is all about. And what that is, is what inhabits the space. Penetrates the space. The space in the library, the space in the paintings.
That these paintings tend toward abstraction isn't always relevant. Paradoxically her paintings have that light out of darkness experience because what we get is something that makes an appearance for the painting, something we have never seen before and will never see again, like that exotic flower in the jungle that only blooms every one thousand years when the planets are just so. Yes, they are still about something too. But don't try to put a finger on it. Be happy for its presence. Be happy for the moment.
This is the paradox again. The artist works so hard to capture that thing that can't be captured, for themselves, for us. Nina Nielsen freezes that moment, stills something as elusive or impossible as a unicorn for us to marvel at, to see, to know, to be with. To believe in.
Nina Nielsen; BRANCH (2010); 24 x 18; oil and sand on canvas |
This is the paradox again. The artist works so hard to capture that thing that can't be captured, for themselves, for us. Nina Nielsen freezes that moment, stills something as elusive or impossible as a unicorn for us to marvel at, to see, to know, to be with. To believe in.
For this reason the paintings are not compositions per se. They don't need to be. They are not about composition in the conventional sense. There is no time for that. There is only time for something else. Something much more important. It is more about placement and energy, not dynamic form as much as dynamic spirit. And even though they are centered they are not quite centered. Maybe about tension or maybe just lucky to get these inspirations, these muses, in the frame at all. Everything moves. We will never be here again.
If there is one message to be had, it is that life is for the living. Places to go, places to be, places to be still.
Nina Nielsen; CALIPH (2011-2012); 28x22inches; oil and sand on canvas |
If there is one message to be had, it is that life is for the living. Places to go, places to be, places to be still.
The texture is part of the magic of these paintings. The sand in the paint acts as a frame to keep the it of the painting in place. Each grain of sand acts as a place holder of sorts. A nod to the accident and the random and the chaos, maybe, or maybe to some larger order. It is a loose net to keep the "it" still for a split second, long enough to allow that moment to, in effect, last forever. There is no getting around what sand does and doesn't bring to the table. Sand is a ground, but a ground that shifts and blows in the wind. From Tibet to the Navajo Nation. And it evokes time. Pyramids were built on the sand and swallowed by it.
A painting like "Tang" falls to one side. It is curious indeed. It seems as curious about us as we are about it. A sphere like a moon rises or peers from behind a shape like a rock or an island on a ground like a sea of iridescent yellow green on black. Like so many of these paintings, it looks back at us. Curiouser and curiouser. Nielsen's curiosity becomes contagious. The lengths that her curiosity takes her to are our gain. We are honored by them. Of course such is the nature of art, just as we are honored by nature, by love, and by life. We just have to never forget it, and these paintings are something of a stark reminder.
As a result what we have are figure/grounds. Almost portraits. More Frans Hals than Rembrandt as they are the moment and not the held pose. Although who knows, maybe they are. Maybe muses pose like unicorns for Nielsen in her garden. Maybe epiphanies like butterflies only take breaks to stretch their wings.
Nina Nielsen; TANG (2011-2013); 24 x 18 inches; oil and sand on canvas |
A painting like "Tang" falls to one side. It is curious indeed. It seems as curious about us as we are about it. A sphere like a moon rises or peers from behind a shape like a rock or an island on a ground like a sea of iridescent yellow green on black. Like so many of these paintings, it looks back at us. Curiouser and curiouser. Nielsen's curiosity becomes contagious. The lengths that her curiosity takes her to are our gain. We are honored by them. Of course such is the nature of art, just as we are honored by nature, by love, and by life. We just have to never forget it, and these paintings are something of a stark reminder.
Yes, these paintings can sometimes be stark. Like that spit of land out in the ocean where their sand hails from. Yankee. Tough, resolute, self-reliant. Only just a little more Thoreau than Emerson. Private. Fiercely independent. Fierce in their solitude. But radiant. Gone their own way, and tenacious, even almost defiant, when they choose their ground.
Again the paradox. Not for quitters. Ephemeral and invisible and yet solid as a rock. These paintings are all of that. A metaphor for painting itself. Nothing if not conviction. Made of not much more than belief, and a belief that cannot just move mountains, but be mountains. Nina Nielsen is that mystic shaman. She makes transformative magic and powerful medicine from a little pigment, binder, and sand.
Nina Nielsen; JUTTA (2010); 24x20 inches; oil and sand on canvas |
And way over on the other side a painting like "Jutta" has more literal and recognizable elements. A figure holds a red niche, or the other way around. The niche is architecture. It is also a sign. It houses the figure, frames the figure, protects the figure, isolates and insulates the figure, and gives it proportion and place.
It is also the Greek letter Pi, the transcendental number, that never stands still. The image is strangely benign, but haunting, like so many of the paintings. Like some ancient culture staring back at us through time. Spirit guide. Life takes sand. Nina Nielsen's got it.
Nina Nielsen; CALEDONIA (2011-2013); 30x24 inches; oil and sand on canvas |
Addison Parks
Spring Hill, September 2013
Nina Nielsen's show at the Gleason Library in Carlisle, Ma runs from July 29th thru October 25th; reception on Saturday September 14 at 1:00.
I did not know Nina is painting ... ah, to suffer like the rest of us ...Well, joy, too.
ReplyDeleteThe work is quite evocative.
ReplyDeleteIt’s really a great piece of writing (about art and, in particular, about Nina) And, I love the quote you launched everything with. J.B.
ReplyDeleteYou are such a good writer. You capture Nina wonderfully in all her good... So much art writing is analytical in a superficial way. - so boring. You have depth and a compelling writing style.
ReplyDeleteM.
Thanks Addison. I really, REALLY like Nina's work! Wish she had a Provincetown connection as an artist. Berta
ReplyDeleteYou're such a good writer...
ReplyDeleteDianne B
Nina has always inspired me in her choice of artists & their work. And now grown out of all that life work, her own paintings become the inspiration. It's a natural progression, but not an easy path, hard acts to follow. She does it beautifully & provocatively.
ReplyDelete