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Nancy  Friese
Paintings

February  23rd  -  March  25th,  2006

Opening Reception: Thursday, February 23, 6-8pm

"A site must interest me, be it the cyclical way a cloud and tree intertwine, the solidity of shape and space, or the variety of movement and flickering light.  My marks in turn try to evoke the original or revealed feeling of the place that has engaged me."

Nancy Friese's powerfully lyrical landscapes are essays in both the substantial and the sublime.  Nationally known for her exuberant oils, watercolors and prints, Friese brings her unique interpretation of place to a panoply of landscapes -  from the sweeping expanses of the American West, to the ancient gardens and shrines of Japan, to the rocky coasts of the South of France and her native Rhode Island. For over twenty years she has devoted herself to painting outdoors - en plein air - making rapid studies of the fleeting effects of light and shadow on the natural environment, then translating what she sees into symphonic arrangements of color and space. Friese's desire to explore the mystery and changing moods of a particular landscape often leads her to revisit locations during different seasons or weather conditions.

Friese's intense emotional responses to her chosen landscapes resound through highly saturated colors and vigorous brushstrokes, prompting comparisons to Van Gogh, Charles Burchfield and the Fauves. A captivating and constant sense of movement is a signature quality of Friese's work, as is an emphasis on the complex interaction between sky and land or sea. Gesturing trees, burgeoning blossoms and rich vegetation interweave, countering strongly contoured, brilliantly colored cloud formations in mercurial skies.

Friese holds a M.F.A. from Yale University, and has received numerous honors and awards including three National Endowment for the Arts grants, one of which allowed her to spend six months working and living in Tokyo, Japan. Other residencies include a semester at Giverny, France, the celebrated home and gardens of Claude Monet, and Pont-Aven in Brittany, a favorite spot of Paul Gauguin's. She has exhibited widely throughout the U.S. and Europe and her work is in many significant collections including the Housatonic Museum of Art, the Grunwald Center at UCLA, and the Johnson & Johnson Corporation. She is currently a professor at Rhode Island School of Design.

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