Artist Talk: Dona Nelson | Collection as Classroom
Building: Academic Building
Room Number: Large Auditorium
Date: Tuesday, March 26, 2024
Time: 04:00 pm End Time: 05:00 pm
Event Category: Community and Arts
Division Host: Communication, Arts & Humanities
Collection as Classroom: Artist Talk featuring Dona Nelson
Join us for the Artist Talk and Exhibition Reception on Tuesday, March 26, 2024 for the spring curated exhibition Collection as Classroom.
Register for the Artist Talk »
Artist Talk at 4:00 p.m. featuring artist and educator Dona Nelson
In-Person: Large Auditorium | Academic Building | Marple Campus (registration optional, but strongly recommended)
Streaming: Via Zoom (registration required to receive streaming link)
Exhibition Reception immediately after Artist Talk
Art Gallery | Room 2305
Free | Refreshments will be served.
Exhibition On View March 4–April 12, 2024
Art Gallery | Room 2305
Visit dccc.edu/gallery for current hours
Dona Nelson is a painter who often works both sides of a stretched canvas, staining and washing it with acrylic paint and water, using a spatula to mark the canvas with the first image, an image of the stretcher bars. Sometimes she glues strips of fabric on to the canvas, allowing them to be a constructed element or ripping them off them off to establish a drawn line through the paint. Nelson prefers to exhibit her two sided paintings on steel stands or wooden constructions, out on the gallery floor rather than parallel to the wall. For forty years, Nelson has made series of different kinds of paintings, distinguished by a variety of approaches to both image and material.
Nelson is a retired Professor of Painting and Drawing at Tyler School of Art, Temple University, Philadelphia, where she worked since 1991. In the summer of 2018, she had an extensive survey of her work, curated by Ian Berry, at the Tang Teaching Museum in Saratoga Springs, New York. There was another survey of her work in 2000, at the Weatherspoon Museum of Fine Art, Greensboro, North Carolina. She currently exhibits her work at the Thomas Erben Gallery in New York City, where she has had five solo exhibitions. Two of her double-sided paintings were featured in the 2014 Whitney Biennial. Other solo exhibitions have been presented at Cheim and Read, the Morris Gallery at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Philadelphia, and the Michael Klein Gallery, NYC. In 1994, Nelson received a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship. In 2011, she was a Foundation for Contemporary Arts recipient. In 2013, she received an Artist Legacy Foundation Grant and in 2015, an Anonymous was a Woman Grant. (Source: Thomas Erben Gallery).
The Visual Art Series is sponsored by the Communication, Arts & Humanities Division.