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NICOLE WITTENBERG

November 3 – 29 2023

Sooner or later, it all boils down to what art at heart really is. One can dance around it, and one does, happily and desperately, like a blazing red giant circling a black hole faster and faster, hoping some supernova will come along to stave off the inevitable before it hits the event horizon, the ultimate point of no return.

Art’s event horizon is trickier, lying in its meaning, its deepest source, its ultimate point. And it always shimmers off in the distance in Nicole Wittenberg’s paintings. Horizons, one might argue, tend to do that. But these are invisible, lurking somewhere between the gesso and the oil, between the extra and the terrestrial, and between many other tautly conflicting forces at war and play in her work.
 
At first look, conflict isn’t what leaps to mind. Wittenberg has a flair for crypsis, or camouflage, and her landscapes, foliage and floral compositions can at a glance seen magical, beautiful, decorative and occasionally even—horrors—tasteful. But before you go in for a taste, keep in mind Hawthorne’s dark tale of "Rappaccini’s Daughter," the girl raised in a garden of poison flowers (like England’s famous Alnwick Poison Garden). Yes, Wittenberg may know about crypsis, but she has a deep and abiding affinity for aposematism, camo’s mortal enemy. Most people would call it warning coloration—highly visible in everything from colorful vipers to traffic cones. In Wittenberg’s hands, the aposematic slips in quietly in sulfur-tangerine skies, phallus-pink trees and bile-yellow foliage. It’s delightful first and dangerous second, echoed by the fact that oil pigments like cadmium yellow and vermilion are often highly toxic themselves.

If one did not know better, one could call her a sci-fi nabi, a interplanetary post-impressionist out to challenge the escapist clichés of art by undermining it with mankind’s pretty, toxic artifice. Her paintings enter comme une faune but are toute fauve underneath, beauty and beast in a single package. As it should be—as it usually is. Wittenberg’s work is to reconcile the two, which she does quite beguilingly and seemingly effortlessly.

But the thing is, one does know better. It’s a nice story, but Wittenberg doesn’t simply set her lever on a single fulcrum, even if it’s slippery, spherical one on which wobble many balances between abstraction and representation, light and dark, masculine and feminine, familiar and foreign, rational and instinctual and more. 

This is because, as good as it looks and sounds, beneath all this, the ultimate point of art isn’t about this. Not for the artist, for whom works end up functioning more like signposts than slideshows. Like so many things revealed by how life progressively unwinds, changing perspectives and focuses as it goes, Wittenberg’s paintings walk in two different directions on two different tightropes that are not quite close together enough.  

On the one hand, her works are representative of the artist’s journey into adulthood, her studies and inoculations, acclaim and success, which in Wittenberg’s case manifests as a voracious fascination with and encyclopedic knowledge of art history (and especially the long and complex histories of American and European landscape painting). 

On the other hand, Wittenberg’s work also represent another journey we all face—the turned-around journey backwards towards childhood. There are lots of inadequate words for this process—regression, the childish, the childlike. They’re all stupid. None captures what Wittenberg experiences and brings to life—that inner knowledge that grows as we do—that all of history and adulthood, even brilliance and talent, are not enough. At some point, we start to see that our desires to conquer, to explode outward into the world conceal an inner desire to collapse inward to the joys of youth, when the imagination could explore blissfully free of critique (from inside or out). 
 
A famous expression is attributed to Picasso: "Every child is an artist—the problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up." But Voltaire tackled the problem 150 years earlier when in “Candide" he concluded, “Il faut cultiver notre jardin.”

We must cultivate our own garden, create our own culture. That is the ultimate point of art; nothing more, in the end. How to define the sensibility that authored the strange gardens in these paintings? In the end, it’s impossible to say. Call it the Wittenberg Uncertainty Principle; Nicole en abyme. The works are nothing if not ambiguous, and the artist is nothing if not ambivalent. Anyone who tells you different cannot be an artist.  

David Colman



Nicole Wittenberg was born in 1979 in San Francisco, California. She received a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute.
 
Wittenberg's recent solo and group exhibitions include “Flesh & Flowers: Made in America” curated by Lauren Taschen at No Name in Paris, France (2023); “Distant Waters” at Nina Johnson Gallery in Miami, Florida (2023); “Moonshine Lullaby” at Massimo De Carlo in London, United Kingdom (2023); “Our Love is Here to Stay” at Acquavella Galleries in Palm Beach, Florida (2022); Tennis Elbow at The Journal Gallery in New York, New York (2022); "Honeysuckle Rose" at Ross + Kramer in East Hampton, New York (2021); "Rewilding" at Nino Mier Gallery in Los Angeles, California (2021); "Sunday Kind of Love" at Nina Johnson Gallery in Miami, Florida (2020); "Tennis Elbow" at The Journal Gallery in New York, New York (2020); "In Her Hands" curated by David Salle at Skarstedt Gallery in New York, New York (2020); "Them, There, Eyes" at Yours Mine Ours Gallery in New York, New York (2018); "Downtown Painting" at Peter Freeman Gallery in New York, New York (2019); "Visionary Painting" Curated by Alex Katz at Colby College Museum of Art in Waterville, Maine (2017); and "All the Best People" at 1:1 Gallery in New York, New York (2013).

Nicole Wittenberg lives and works in New York, New York.

Sooner or later, it all boils down to what art at heart really is. One can dance around it, and one does, happily and desperately, like a blazing red giant circling a black hole faster and faster, hoping some supernova will come along to stave off the inevitable before it hits the event horizon, the ultimate point of no return.

Art’s event horizon is trickier, lying in its meaning, its deepest source, its ultimate point. And it always shimmers off in the distance in Nicole Wittenberg’s paintings. Horizons, one might argue, tend to do that. But these are invisible, lurking somewhere between the gesso and the oil, between the extra and the terrestrial, and between many other tautly conflicting forces at war and play in her work.
 
At first look, conflict isn’t what leaps to mind. Wittenberg has a flair for crypsis, or camouflage, and her landscapes, foliage and floral compositions can at a glance seen magical, beautiful, decorative and occasionally even—horrors—tasteful. But before you go in for a taste, keep in mind Hawthorne’s dark tale of "Rappaccini’s Daughter," the girl raised in a garden of poison flowers (like England’s famous Alnwick Poison Garden). Yes, Wittenberg may know about crypsis, but she has a deep and abiding affinity for aposematism, camo’s mortal enemy. Most people would call it warning coloration—highly visible in everything from colorful vipers to traffic cones. In Wittenberg’s hands, the aposematic slips in quietly in sulfur-tangerine skies, phallus-pink trees and bile-yellow foliage. It’s delightful first and dangerous second, echoed by the fact that oil pigments like cadmium yellow and vermilion are often highly toxic themselves.

If one did not know better, one could call her a sci-fi nabi, a interplanetary post-impressionist out to challenge the escapist clichés of art by undermining it with mankind’s pretty, toxic artifice. Her paintings enter comme une faune but are toute fauve underneath, beauty and beast in a single package. As it should be—as it usually is. Wittenberg’s work is to reconcile the two, which she does quite beguilingly and seemingly effortlessly.

But the thing is, one does know better. It’s a nice story, but Wittenberg doesn’t simply set her lever on a single fulcrum, even if it’s slippery, spherical one on which wobble many balances between abstraction and representation, light and dark, masculine and feminine, familiar and foreign, rational and instinctual and more. 

This is because, as good as it looks and sounds, beneath all this, the ultimate point of art isn’t about this. Not for the artist, for whom works end up functioning more like signposts than slideshows. Like so many things revealed by how life progressively unwinds, changing perspectives and focuses as it goes, Wittenberg’s paintings walk in two different directions on two different tightropes that are not quite close together enough.  

On the one hand, her works are representative of the artist’s journey into adulthood, her studies and inoculations, acclaim and success, which in Wittenberg’s case manifests as a voracious fascination with and encyclopedic knowledge of art history (and especially the long and complex histories of American and European landscape painting). 

On the other hand, Wittenberg’s work also represent another journey we all face—the turned-around journey backwards towards childhood. There are lots of inadequate words for this process—regression, the childish, the childlike. They’re all stupid. None captures what Wittenberg experiences and brings to life—that inner knowledge that grows as we do—that all of history and adulthood, even brilliance and talent, are not enough. At some point, we start to see that our desires to conquer, to explode outward into the world conceal an inner desire to collapse inward to the joys of youth, when the imagination could explore blissfully free of critique (from inside or out). 
 
A famous expression is attributed to Picasso: "Every child is an artist—the problem is how to remain an artist once we grow up." But Voltaire tackled the problem 150 years earlier when in “Candide" he concluded, “Il faut cultiver notre jardin.”

We must cultivate our own garden, create our own culture. That is the ultimate point of art; nothing more, in the end. How to define the sensibility that authored the strange gardens in these paintings? In the end, it’s impossible to say. Call it the Wittenberg Uncertainty Principle; Nicole en abyme. The works are nothing if not ambiguous, and the artist is nothing if not ambivalent. Anyone who tells you different cannot be an artist.  

David Colman



Nicole Wittenberg was born in 1979 in San Francisco, California. She received a BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute.
 
Wittenberg's recent solo and group exhibitions include “Flesh & Flowers: Made in America” curated by Lauren Taschen at No Name in Paris, France (2023); “Distant Waters” at Nina Johnson Gallery in Miami, Florida (2023); “Moonshine Lullaby” at Massimo De Carlo in London, United Kingdom (2023); “Our Love is Here to Stay” at Acquavella Galleries in Palm Beach, Florida (2022); Tennis Elbow at The Journal Gallery in New York, New York (2022); "Honeysuckle Rose" at Ross + Kramer in East Hampton, New York (2021); "Rewilding" at Nino Mier Gallery in Los Angeles, California (2021); "Sunday Kind of Love" at Nina Johnson Gallery in Miami, Florida (2020); "Tennis Elbow" at The Journal Gallery in New York, New York (2020); "In Her Hands" curated by David Salle at Skarstedt Gallery in New York, New York (2020); "Them, There, Eyes" at Yours Mine Ours Gallery in New York, New York (2018); "Downtown Painting" at Peter Freeman Gallery in New York, New York (2019); "Visionary Painting" Curated by Alex Katz at Colby College Museum of Art in Waterville, Maine (2017); and "All the Best People" at 1:1 Gallery in New York, New York (2013).

Nicole Wittenberg lives and works in New York, New York.

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