Latest Artworks

"Pretending To Be Brave" 48"x48" acrylic on canvas

“Pretending To Be Brave”
48″x48″ acrylic on canvas

Just about completed, I think.  Both paintings have a completely different feel to them.  One feels cool, and the other warm. One bold, the other quiet. Both appear a bit mysterious.

"Bones Glow Through Skin"  36"x36" acrylic on canvas

“Bones Glow Through Skin”
36″x36″ acrylic on canvas

Alchemical Vessel at Hisaoka Gallery

Honored to have been invited to participate in this super curated exhibit.  Transformation of the raw bowl into a healing vessel had its roots in the loss of my lovely mother several months ago.  That event sparked a new group of figurative paintings featuring strong, confident women with ever bigger and more extravagant hair, wig or headgear.  Each painting became more outrageous, symbolizing fearlessness, freedom to go out of bounds, and permission to be exceptional.  For the bowl, I used its curvature to take the idea even further, with the headpiece so large it circles the vessel, enfolding the figure in a protective embrace.

Can you tell I was a bit out of my comfort zone, painting small and circular!? Normally I stand, use large brushes, and fling paint energetically.  Happily, I think the results with the bowl are as outrageous and fearless as the work on flat canvas.

Tottering An Alchemical Vessel 11" diameter by 5" high ceramic bowl, acrylic and graphite

Tottering
An Alchemical Vessel
11″ diameter by 3″ high ceramic bowl, acrylic and graphite

Alchemical Vessels 2015

March 27 – May 22, 2015
Opening Reception: Friday, March 27 | 7-9pm
Benefit: Friday, May 1 (By Contribution Only)
Make your contribution starting on Tuesday, March 10th at 10am!
The Joan Hisaoka Healing Arts Gallery at Smith Center for Healing and the Arts, 1632 U St NW, Washington, DC, is happy to announce the return of the Alchemical Vessels Exhibition and Benefit in 2015! This year’s exhibition will run from March 27 – May 22, 2015, with the special by-contribution-only Benefit on Friday, May 1st, where everyone who makes a $150 Benefit-Vessel contribution (beginning Tuesday, March 10th at 10am) can select one of the works in the exhibition to add to their collection! The vessels are selected in the order contributions were made, so the earlier you make a contribution, the earlier you can select your work of art!
This year’s exhibition and benefit features works from over 100 new artists hand-selected by 20 prominent curators. See below for a list of this year’s incredible line-up of artists & our invited curators, and visit www.smithcenter.org/benefit to learn more and make your contribution beginning 10am on Tuesday, March 10th!
Artists:
David Alfuth, Beth Baldwin, Rhoda Baer, Emily Biondo, Ed Bisese, Julia Bloom, Raya Bodnarchuk, Joseph Bradley, Judy Byron, Lenny Campello, Jessica Cebra, Mei Mei Chang, Hsin-Hsi Chen, Patterson Clark, Billy Colbert, Susan Cole, Paula Crawford, Michael Crossett, Sarah Dale, Catherine Day, JD Deardourff, Jennifer DePalma, Robert Devers, Jessica Drenk, Patricia Dubroof, Pam Eichner, Dana Ellyn, Margo Elsayd, Susan Finsen & Michael Holt, Sharon Fishel, Kathryn Freeman, Marcia Fry, Adrienne Gaither, Michael Gessner, Carol Brown Goldberg, Pat Goslee, Matthew Grimes, Andrea Haffner, Courtney Hengerer, Jeff Herrity, Maurice “Mo” Higgs, Ryan Hill, Joseph Hoffman, Jeff Huntington, David Ibata, Martha Jackson Jarvis, Njena Surae Jarvis, Rose Jaffe, Mike Johnson, Mariah Anne Johnson, Wayson Jones, Maria Karametou, Sally Kauffman, Elizabeth Kendall, Joanne Kent, Hana Kim, Micheline Klagsbrun , Kitty Klaidman, PD Klein, George Koch, Yar Koporulin, Peter Krsko, Bridget Sue Lambert, Maria Lanas, Toni Lane, Khanh Le, Jun Lee, Kyujin Lee, Nate Lewis, Mimi Logothetis, Steve Loya, Akemi Maegawa, Alex Mayer, Donna M. McCullough, Kathryn McDonnell, Maggie Michael, Vanessa Monroe, E.J. Montgomery, Lucinda Murphy, Ziad Nagy, Leslie Nolan, Frederick Nunley, Cory Oberndorfer, John Paradiso, Elena Patiño, Miguel Perez Lem, Brian Petro, Thomas Petzwinkler, Jeneen Piccuirro, Michael B. Platt & Carol A. Beane, Pattie Porter Firestone, Tom Raneses, Red Dirt Studios, Ellington Robinson, Carolyn Roth, Bonner Sale, Jean Sausele Knodt, Matt Sesow, Foon Sham, Janathel Shaw, Lillian Shaw, Bernardo Siles, Steve Skowron, Jeffrey Smith, Anna Soevik, Langley Spurlock, Stan Squirewell, Rebecca Stone Gordon, Lynn Sures, Tang, Lisa Marie Thalhammer, Valerie Theberge, Michael Torra, Kelly Towles, Dan Treado, Ruth Trevarrow, Tariq Tucker, Pamela Viola, Ellyn Weiss, Lee Wheeler, Catherine White, Sharon Wolpoff, Sue Wrbican, and Jenny Wu

Curators:
Sondra N. Arkin, Artist & Independent Curator | Philip Barlow, Associate Commissioner, DC Department of Insurance, Securities & Banking; Board Member, District of Columbia Arts Center & Millenium Arts Salon | Chuck Baxter, Artist | Robert Devers, Professor of Fine Arts and Ceramics, Corcoran School of the Arts + Design, George Washington University | Thomas Drymon, Curator, doris-mae | Charlie Gaynor, Realtor and Photographer, member of the Mid City Artists | Aneta Georgievska-Shine, Lecturer in Art History, University of Maryland and Smithsonian Institution | George Hemphill, Gallery Director, Hemphill | Francie Hester, Visual Artist | Don Kimes, Professor, Director Studio Art Program, American University Department of Art; Artistic Director, Visual Arts at Chautauqua Institution | Zofie Lang, Artist | Mary Liniger, Executive Director, Art Enables | Akemi Maegawa, Artist | Jayme McLellan, Director & Founder, Civilian Art Projects | Twig Murray, Gallery Director, Athenaeum Gallery | Victoria Reis, Co-Founder, Executive & Artistic Director, Transformer | Nancy Sausser, Curator and Exhibitions Director, McLean Project for the Arts | Andy Shallal, Founder, Busboys and Poets | Stan Squirewell, Artist

Night Poem, Or?

"Night Poem" by Washington DC Artist Leslie Nolan  40"Wx60"H

“Night Poem” by Washington DC Artist Leslie Nolan
40″Wx60″H

I just finished this large piece, and at the last minute I decided I liked it best in a vertical vice horizontal formal.  The cool thing is that when hung vertically the right side looks terrifically interesting with the drips against the bare canvas around the edge.   Installed in a room in the house, this artwork has an enigmatic, yet rich feel, because I used some gray Duron wall paint the same as the wall color.   With a black chair in front of it the painting enhances the room, conveying an ultra modern chic.  It’s not meant to be decorative, however.  Read into the image whatever you like – seascape, landscape, fencing, snowy evening, icy roadway…It’s up to you.

Happy New Year

Washington DC Artist Leslie Nolan's "This Can't Go On"

Washington DC Artist Leslie Nolan’s “This Can’t Go On”

Just finished this new artwork – loose, exciting and unforgettable.  Have been thinking a lot about my mother and that there exists a linkage between mothers and daughters that transcends time, distance, and culture.  My mother has been and always will be my strength.  This artwork, though it bears no resemblance to her, has a strength and implacable perseverance that puts me in mind of her.

This upcoming new year represents a break from the past, so I have joined a new gallery, Susan Calloway Fine Arts in Georgetown, Washington, DC and am working on solo shows slated for September at both Calloway and the Delaplaine Arts Center in Frederick, MD.  2015 should be a fabulous year.

I wish you all the best!

 

 

 

Exhibit Closing at Arts Club of Washington

Leslie Nolan Exhibit at Arts Club of Washington

Leslie Nolan Exhibit at Arts Club of Washington

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Leslie Nolan’s “All I Got” (left) and “Freefall” at the Arts Club of Washington

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Leslie Nolan’s “Dystopian” and “Dystopian #2″ in the middle. Both 60″ high x 48” wide acrylic on canvas.

It’s always a moving experience (forgive the pun) taking down an exhibit, but particularly so at the wonderful Arts Club of Washington. On display all November in the Club’s imposing Monroe Gallery, the show was not only well-attended, but included a talk by curator Dr. Erich Keel and I was able to say a few words about the work.

In case you missed it, I’ve included below the Artist Statement:

“My approach to artwork involves depicting what is felt rather than what is seen.  Fascinated by the complexities of ordinary people, their faults, fears, resilience, and courage, I respond to the emotion behind the facade.  I try to reveal their vulnerability by focusing on moods as interpreted by faces and body language.

Because I spent another career keeping secrets in my work abroad, my current interest is to express in painting universal feelings, which remain largely hidden in real life.  We all cloak ourselves behind a veneer of success and confidence, yet situations in our lives wreak havoc with our emotions and motives, which lie just under the surface.

I begin by using models and photographs of models, then distort and exaggerate the pose or expression, making the subject appear to be undergoing inner turmoil, as though reacting to an outside influence.  I like the work to suggest controlled chaos, as if something important has happened to each subject.  In these images of the human figure, I imagine the individual as reacting to money or job-related issues, loneliness, semi-stable environments, or familial concerns.  Whatever the cause or situation, each artwork depicts the fragility of life.  Filled with questions, the paintings invite the viewer to connect the dots and develop his or her own interpretation.”

Just a reminder – I’m exclusively represented in the Washington, DC area by Susan Calloway Fine Arts in Georgetown.

Curator Erich Keel’s Remarks at Arts Club of Washington

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Dr Erich Keel is Head of Education at the Kreeger Museum (Emeritus) in Washington, DC and a well-known curator.

See this show at The Arts Club of Washington, 2017 I St NW, Washington, DC through November 29, 2014.

Arts Club of Washington Opening

Washington Post Notice

Washington Post Notice

Leslie Nolan Exhibit

Leslie Nolan Exhibit

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Leslie M. Nolan Artist Remarks at Arts Club of Washington With Curator Erich L. Keel Third From Left

Leslie M. Nolan Artist Remarks at Arts Club of Washington With Curator Erich L. Keel Third From Left

Had an interesting and fun November 7 opening for my show of 13 artworks at The Arts Club of Washington.  President James Monroe occupied this gorgeous, stately, historic residence and held the inaugural ball upstairs. It is a Washington, DC gem.  Curator Erich L. Keel, Head of Education at the Kreeger Museum (Emeritus), made remarks and I had an opportunity to say a few words, too, along with fellow exhibitors Bob Tetro and Jane Godfrey.  Hard to tell from these photographs, but it was a huge turnout.

My thanks to the ever-gracious Gallery Director Nichola Hays for her support and expertise. The exhibit is open to the public through November 29. Check it out:

2017 I Street, NW, Washington, DC.

Telephone:  202.331.7282 ext 4

artsclubofwashington.org

 

 

 

Exhibiting at The Arts Club of Washington

Leslie Nolan at the Arts Club of Washington

Leslie Nolan at the Arts Club of Washington

This weekend I’m installing an exhibit at the venerable Arts Club of Washington.  Curated by Erich Keel, Head of Education at the Kreeger Museum (Emeritus), the show includes fellow artists Jane Godfrey and Bob Tetro.  This should be a big show.  Gallery Director Nichola Hays advised me to bring 20 artworks – that’s a lot of artwork, particularly since many pieces are 48″ x 60″.

Opening Reception – Friday Nov 7, 2014 – 6:30-8:30 pm – soft drinks, wine, snacks

 

Revisiting the (e)merge Experience

Artist Leslie Nolan at (e)merge art fair, DC

Artist Leslie Nolan at (e)merge art fair, DC

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Visitor With Leslie Nolan Artwork

Visitor With Leslie Nolan Artwork

Touchstone Gallery @ (e)merge

Touchstone Gallery @ (e)merge

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Touchstone Gallery Room at (e)merge 2014

Touchstone Gallery Room at (e)merge 2014

Above, some random photos of the Touchstone Gallery room at (e)merge art fair in Washington, DC. The fair, which ran from Oct 2-5, was jammed with folks who love art – buyers, curators, artists, art students, collectors, gallerists, and art writers. Lots of traffic and a very supportive administrative staff tending to the needs of participants. Kudos to the organizers and staffers who made it happen.

The Touchstone room attracted lots of visitors during this first year of participation.  Thanks to Gallery Director Ksenia Grishkova and Director’s Assistant Rachel Tanzi for their staffing, and to fellow exhibitors Ai-Wen Wu Kratz and Pete McCutchen for their fabulous artwork and assistance before, during and after.

 

 

Beyond the Edge

Artist Leslie Nolan's "Beyond the Edge" at The Art League Gallery

Artist Leslie Nolan’s “Beyond the Edge” at The Art League Gallery

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Check out this link for the gallery blog about Beyond the Edge this month. Want to thank all those who came out in support, including family, friends, and fellow artists, and, in particular, the Gallery staff who have been so helpful during this period.  They did a terrific job hanging the show.

At The Art League Gallery

Oct 9 – Nov 3

105 North Union, Alexandria, VA