Tag: Nina Nolte

  • Bathing in Beauty: Nina Nolte

    Bathing in Beauty: Nina Nolte

    While Mr. F and I are camping in Yosemite, I’m resharing some posts you might have missed the first go ’round!  Enjoy!

    Although I love the cold winter months, for many, January is a tough month to swallow.  All the gaiety of the holidays now in the past, it seems such a long time before the warmth of spring and the ease of summer.  So on what may be for many of you a cold, dreary Monday, I thought a little sunshine and warmth from German artist Nina Nolte may put a little spring back in your socked & booted step!

    Nina Nolte | artsy forager #art #artists #paintings
    Forgotten Dreams, acrylic on canvas, 100x16x4 cm

    Nolte’s depictions of stylish ladies lounging by the pool recalls, to me, a modern-day version of traditional European works depicting the wealthy socializing and at play, such as Fragonard or Boucher.  The richness of the color ( that yellow! )and details in the folds of fabric bring to mind the sumptuousness of the textiles of Vermeer.

    Nina Nolte | artsy forager #art #artists #paintings
    The Days of Wine and Roses, acrylic on canvas, 100x200x4 cm

    The works do hearken back in some ways to European traditions, but it is done in such an enchantingly modern, yet elegantly timeless way.

    Nina Nolte | artsy forager #art #artists #paintings
    Some of Those Days, acrylic on canvas, 100x160x4 cm

    The viewer is given the position of voyeur, thanks especially to the bird’s eye view angle of many of the pieces.  It feels a bit like we’re eavesdropping on some really juicy society gossip!

    Nina Nolte | artsy forager #art #artists #paintings
    You Must Believe in Spring, acrylic on canvas, 65x65x4
    Nina Nolte | artsy forager #art #artists #paintings
    As Time Goes By, acrylic on canvas, 100x160x4 cm

    To bask in more of Nolte’s bathing beauties, please visit her website.  Think of these while you’re sloshing through freezing rain and snow!

    Featured image is How Deep is the Ocean?, acrylic on canvas, 1oox200x4 cm.  All images are via the artist’s website.