
Nela Solomon
Nela Solomon was born
into a rural, middle income family in Shiraz,
Iran, in July of 1971. The first of three
children, Nela grew up in a creatively liberated
environment wherein her parents encouraged
her innate talents in the visual arts by
providing her with sketching pads and watercolor
sets at a young age. With these tools, Nela
spent much of her youth sketching sunsets,
land scapes, still-lifes, and even portraits
of her young friends. These early artistic
endeavors climaxed when Nela lived in Vienna
for two years at age 21. While her principle
purpose was to improve her German, she was
enraptured y the city's artwork. From the
Austrian Secessionist figuratives such as
those of Gustav Klimt and Egon Schiele,
to the modern, avant-garde exhibits that
seemed to exist without rules - Nela witnessed
the energy an innovation of Vienna and its
artistic community. The exhilaration provided
by that community would stick with her forever.
While
Nela's parents fostered her art, they none
the less ingrained in her a sense of financial
rigidity, due to which Nela allowed her
artistic pursuits to fall by the wayside
while she took up more lucrative studies
in science. Indeed this drive for financial
security - coupled with her newfound love
of travel prompted Nela to immigrate to
the Unite States in 1996, where she went
to study at Pierce College in Los Angeles,
California.
In
an attempt to keep in touch with her artistic
pursuits, Nela took up work as the studio
apprentice to the well-known artist Emanuel,
whose work had gained acclaim across the
United States. Nela's deep talent and artistic
confidence immediately became apparent to
Emanuel, who quickly let the younger painter
work solely on her own art. Under Emanuel's
influence, Nela worked mostly with mixed
media on canvas, and was primarily drawn
to paint the broad and vibrant abstracts
of her tutor. Not forsaking her rural and
liberated upbringing, however, spaces that
are as much about nature as they are about
abstraction. Indeed, Some of her paintings
even seem to be a struggle between the two
styles, as Nela often blends sharp colors
and impersonal geometrics with soft shades
or organic , burgeoning still life. The
result is a uniquely tense artwork in which
the organic and natural elements of the
paintings seem to struggle with the more
modern, abstract concepts around them.
Since
delving into her art full-time, Nela has
opened her own studio, shown her work at
several locations around Southern California,
and exhibited for the first time at the
Art Expo in New York, 2001, where her work
was met with great praise.
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