Nel Aerts
Artist Desk
2017
Textile and aluminium
86 × 53 cm
Unique work in a series of 10 variations, signed and numbered by the artist on a certificate
Out of stock
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For a few years, Nel Aerts is explicitly taking center stage in her work. During a residence in the Van Gogh house in Zundert (NL) in 2015, Aerts made a series of 100 ballpoint drawings of herself in different situations: working in her studio while smoking a cigarette, drinking wine in a bar, walking around town or lying on the bed. These drawings are full of references – both to moments from art history (like Vincent Van Gogh’s famous bedroom, or Marcel Duchamp’s Nue en descendant l’escalier), as to her own previous work, which she integrates into the interiors or which her painted persona is drawing in different settings. Of course, these 100 drawings are not all autobiographical – the artist makes an alter-ego of herself, a figure that can stage in all conceivable situations.
Over the years that followed the residence in Zundert, the 100 drawings further developed as large textiles and paintings on canvas. In these new works, Nel Aerts plays with materials and media, and with the simplicity of the simple black and white ballpoint drawings. The works become bigger and more abstract, simpler in line, but also more colorful and more expressive. In one of the works from this series, the character (originally a self-portrait of the artist’s work in her studio) is abstracted to such an extent, that it almost resembles one of Nel Aerts’ older expressive, colorful figures. The work Nel Aerts made especially for our latest Billboard Series is based on this last painting. It’s a small watercolor of a similar figure, drawing at a desk. Elaborating on this watercolor, Nel Aerts translated the motive of the artist desk to a series of ten unique textile collages.
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Nel Aerts moves in a freely, intuitive way between different media as painting, drawing, collage, performance and sculpture. Since a few years she focuses more often on the portrait-genre, which she visualises on paper or on wooden panels, with careful attention to the different qualities of each material. As such, she is creating a large collection (family almost) of posing subjects caught between abstract patterns and hard-edged figuration. The figures she portraits refer to both popular culture and her direct, everyday surroundings.
The self-portraits are tragicomic in the sense of the contrasts they evoke. Alternately they are desperate or funny, extra- or introverted, thought- or playful carved from wood or originated as a collage, but they are always introspective and self-relativistic.
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