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ANGELINA NASSO
Dates: May 19 July 7, 2001
Opening Reception: Saturday May 19, 57 pm
Marcel Sitcoske Gallery is proud to
present new work by New York based painter Angelina Nasso. This
is the first solo exhibition of work by this Australian-born artist
on the West Coast.
The atmospheric landscapes that Nasso paints are exquisitely rendered.
The impression one gets from these impeccably made objects is an
overwhelming sense of calm and serenity, brought about by the subtle
manipulation of light and space. More than portray a specific location
or capture a moment in time, they serve to create a meditative space
for the viewer.
Nasso has grounded these works in a number of diverse artistic traditions.
They are in part indebted to Chinese landscape painting, specifically
from the Northern Sung period (960-1126), which Nasso was influenced
by when she studied in Hangzhou, China. Artists of this period attempted
to liberate the viewer from earthly concerns by portraying the more
ethereal aspects of the natural world. Monumental mountain scenes
opening onto vistas of limitless space were common subjects. Nasso
has also looked to the European Romantic tradition of painting for
inspiration, exemplified in the work of Caspar David Friedrich,
who tried to capture the sublime in his breathtaking landscapes.
She builds on these traditions in works such as Involuti (72 x 80
inches) with its mist-shrouded mountain tops and perspective high
above the clouds. Similarly, in Realm of Luna (35 x 85 inches) a
flat plain gives way to a rocky mountain range of cool greens as
a fog bank cascades down its valleys.
These fantastical landscapes also demonstrate a link with photography
as their smooth surfaces retain little trace of brushstrokes. They
seem balanced between memory, dream and out-of-focus photograph:
snapshots of a primordial world that never existed. Nasso is able
to achieve these results because of her strong emphasis on technique
and craftsmanship. She paints in thin layers over a base of sanded
modeling paste, leaving a seamless surface that masks the labor
behind it.
Make no mistake however; these are contemporary works to be sure.
Although traditional in character, their hazy atmospherics often
border on abstraction as with Nimue (76 x 80 inches)a cloudscape
of black forms swirling about a pink tinged sky. It is this relationship
between the surface of the canvas and the depths captured therein
which enhances the power of these truly remarkable paintings.
A graduate of the School of Visual Arts in New York where she received
the Honors Award for Outstanding Achievement in Fine Arts, Nasso
has also studied at the SF Art Institute. Her work has been shown
in numerous group exhibitions in New York, Houston, San Francisco,
and Padova and Pavia, Italy.
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