Interior. 2009
Gouache, ink on paper, matted and framed
Frame: 17 ¼ x 21 1/8”
NJ13 1
Strobatoms. 2012
Oil on cut brass, with ceramic, on wood shelf, 2-part
1: 24 x 9 ½ x 9 ½”
2: 24 ½ x 9 x 9”
NJ13 2
Paraportal (Photo-Op) #2. 2013
Dye and gesso on paper and paperboard, wood supports, cotton ribbon
103 x 14 ½ x 1 ½”
NJ13 4
Paraportal (Photo-Op) #3. 2013
Dye and gesso on paper and paperboard, wood supports, cotton ribbon
40 x 44 x 1 ¾”
NJ13 5
Paraportal (Photo-Op) #4. 2013
Dye and gesso on paper and paperboard, wood supports, cotton ribbon
103 x 14 ½ x 2 ¼”
NJ13 6
Paraportal (Photo-Op) #5. 2013
Dye and gesso on paper and paperboard, wood supports, cotton ribbon
49 x 20 ½ x 1 ½”
NJ13 7
Asteroid Belt. 2011
Acrylic, gouache, pastel on paper, framed
Frame: 21 x 33”
(NJ13 8)
In the Hollow. 2012
Gouache on paper, framed
22 x 17”
(NJ13 9)
Space Lace #1. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 10)
Space Lace #2. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 11)
Space Lace #3. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 12)
Space Lace #4. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 13)
Space Lace #5. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 14)
Space Lace #6. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 15)
Space Lace #7. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 16)
Space Lace #8. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 17)
Space Lace #9. 2012
Dye on ceramic, cotton string
22 x 36 x 3/8”
(NJ13 18)
Cozy Bubble #1. 2012
Gouache, acrylic on aluminum, wood, papier mache, fabric
5 ½ x 7 ½ x 2 ¾”
(NJ13 19)
Cozy Bubble #2. 2012
Gouache, acrylic on aluminum, wood, papier mache, fabric
5 ½ x 7 ½ x 2 ¾”
(NJ13 20)
Cozy Bubble #3. 2012
Gouache, acrylic on aluminum, wood, papier mache, fabric
5 ½ x 7 ½ x 2 7/8”
(NJ13 21)
Cozy Bubble #4. 2012
Gouache, acrylic on aluminum, wood, papier mache, fabric
5 ½ x 7 ½ x 2 ¾”
(NJ13 22)
Popcorn #1. 2011
Oil on plaster over papier mache, dyed cotton fabric
84 x 18 x 7”
(NJ13 23)
Streetsweeper #1. 2012
Enamel on ceramic, papier mache, metal
9 ½ x 13 ¾ x 3”
(NJ13 24)
Groupie #1. 2012-13
Felt covered wood, dye on ceramic, cotton string
38 ½ x 11 ¾ x 1 7/8”
(NJ13 25)
Shagman. 2011-13
Wool yarn, fabric dye, ceramic, oil on canvas with yarn
82 x 47 ½ x 5”
(NJ13 26)
Groupie #2. 2012-13
Felt covered wood, dye on ceramic, cotton string
38 ½ x 11 ¼ x 1 7/8”
(NJ13 27)
Streetsweeper #2. 2012
Enamel on ceramic, papier mache, metal
9 ½ x 14 x 3 ½”
(NJ13 28)
Popcorn #2. 2011
Oil on plaster over papier mache, metal
84 x 18 x 7”
(NJ13 29)
Spirohums A & B. 2012
Dyed felt, cotton string, paper, aluminum, enamel on ceramic, wood, on wood shelf, 2-part
A: 24 ¾ x 11 x 8 ½”
B: 23 ¾ x 8 ¾ x 8”
NJ13 30
Blue Bubble. 2010-11
Collage with gouache, pastel, watercolor, thread on paper, framed
Frame: 22 ¾ x 32 ½”
(NJ13 31)
Brain Bob. 2011
Gouache on paper, matted and framed
Frame: 12 ¾ x 9 ¾”
(NJ13 32)
Blue Tree. 2009-12
Oil, gouache, mica, wood, paper, wire, string, paste, art metal, ceramic, rhinestones,
4-part, on wood shelf
32 x 36 ½ x 11 ½”
NJ13 33
Popping Coral. 2011-12
Gouache on ceramic, paper, fabric, wire, metal, rhinestones, leather
15 ½ x 9 x 8 ½”
(NJ13 34)
By the Stream. 2012
Gouache, acrylic on paper, framed
Frame: 22 x 17”
(NJ13 35)
Rosamund Felsen Gallery is pleased once again to present an exhibition of the work of Nancy Jackson.
Nancy’s work has explored, among other things, the primeval beginnings and evolving nature of human consciousness & our perpetual growth into the future. Her current work continues along these lines by looking at our sense of ourselves as being unfamiliar, as aliens who travel through and inhabit outer space, and as embodied mystics who travel within.
This exhibition will include new paintings, sculptures, and two installations, one is a nine piece symmetrical installation, Introducing Shagman, the other is a five piece work, Photo OP, in which visitors are invited to photograph themselves using their own devices.
Nancy Jackson sets the stage for our journey out of the ordinary with “Interior,” a modestly sized gouache and ink work on paper. Displayed on the entry wall of the gallery, it establishes the muted pastel pallette and passion for ornamentation that instantly informs us that we are “not in Minimalism anymore.” Those familiar with the work of Florine Stettheimer, an introspective early 20th century artist best remembered for the innovative cellophane and lace sets she designed for the 1934 operatic production of “Four Saints in Three Acts,” may discern echoes of her concerns in Jackson’s output. Both New York-based women - if separated by time - effectively incorporate references to transparency and luminescence into their art, suggested metaphorically here in the diaphanous drapes that frame the windows of Jackson’s “Interior” and the slightly off center reflections she captures in her ornate vanity mirror.
Jackson’s “Paraportal (Photo-Op)” invites viewers to center themselves under a delicately colored, conscientiously constructed, ornamental cut paper construction that serves as a framing device. After realizing that each viewer's own image appears relatively small when the totality of “Paraportal (Photo-Op)” is present in their camera’s view finder, visitors may conclude that, like Alice complying with instructions to “Eat Me,” they can grow their size relative to the artwork simply by stepping out into the room, away from the wall and closer to the camera.
When visitors have their backs to “Paraportal (Photo-Op),” the ceramic elements laced together in “Space Lace #1-9,” hung sky high on the opposite wall, are most clearly visible. Jackson wears a necklace similar to elements in the wall hanging, reinforcing her shaman-like appearance in Grant Mudford’s insightful photo portrait, featured on the gallery’s invitation to this show. Next to the artist, enthroned on a mountain of pillows, is “Blue Tree,” an enchanting assembly of intricate jewel-like elements that is a worthy tribute to Jackson’s complex sensitivity to color, texture, pattern and form, and most likely a coincidental acknowledgement of Stettheimer’s posthumously published book of poetry, “Crystal Flowers.”
Also amazing on an intimate scale, are the four works in Jackson’s “Cozy Bubble” series, featuring doll sized beds centered in protective shell-like frames, with a variety of interiors designed to provoke delightful dreams. On the opposite end of the size scale, elements composing Jackson’s wooly installation “Shagman,” evoke an evening of carnival fun, intermixed with Mike Kelley’s incredulity. Even though “Streetsweeper 1” and its twin, equipped with brushes that serve as tails, add touches of frivolity, a disconcerting element clings to this work.
The scene-stealers in this show tend to be the intricate, multi-media sculptural pieces exquisitely fabricated by Jackson. But those who pay less attention to the half dozen paintings Jackson positions throughout the galley, performing like poetic chapter headings and sign posts, may miss subtle innuendoes embedded in the artist’s work. The most autobiographical of Jackson’s flat, framed creations may be “Blue Bubble,” a collage constructed out of gouache, pastel, watercolor, and thread on paper. In it we see a figure resembling the artist strolling nonchalantly on an embossed, biomorphic sky blue platform of her own creation, orbiting above the curved surface of the earth. Carefully observed, this painted work and other fantasies created by this intuitive artist compel us to take time to dream, adjusting our perspective to fully examine each work we encounter in her enchanted world of possibilities with a sense of wonder before continuing down the path towards the next adventure Jackson has in store for us.
(Rosamund Felsen Gallery, Santa Monica)