Nash Glynn
Nash Glynn (born 1992) is an American artist working in painting, photography, and video.[1][2][3] She is known for her nude self-portraits and minimalist landscapes and still lives.[4] She frequently depicts herself in her paintings using a simple palette of just red, white, and blue.[5] She has exhibited internationally at Company Gallery and Metro Pictures in New York, Vielmetter Los Angeles, the Victoria Miro Gallery and the Tate Modern in London, Maison Populaire in Paris, and the Latvian National Museum of Art.[6][7]
Early life and education
[edit]Glynn was born and raised in Miami, Florida and learned to paint while working at her father's set design shop.[8]
She graduated with a BFA from Tufts University in 2014 and with an MFA from Columbia University in 2017. During graduate school, Glynn medically transitioned from male to female.[9][10]
Work
[edit]Glynn was a 2017–2018 Artist Fellow at the Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art.[11]
In 2019, Glynn had a show at the non-profit gallery Participant, Inc. Titled The Future is Fiction, the show included paintings, drawings, videos, and photography, in each Glynn used her body as a medium to contemplate and probe categories such as "nature," "female," and "human."[12] Glynn uses the transfeminine form in against fast changing ecologies, claiming that climate change is not only as a problem of representation, but also as a threat to essentialist gender ideologies, such as who will be allocated certain resources before others.
Later that year, Glynn delivered a talk on the artist and writer Claude Cahun as part of the New Museum's 2019 Art+Feminism Wikipedia Edit-a-thon.
In 2020, Glynn's solo show at OCDChinatown featured one colossus-like self-portrait. Actress Hari Nef describes the painting, Self Portrait with One Foot Forward and One Hand Reaching Out.[2]
Glynn had her first solo exhibition on the West Coast of the USA at Vielmetter Gallery in 2022. Titled, Interiors, the ten-work show had some of her largest paintings to-date. Critic Sarah Nicole Prickett wrote of her work, they are: "scenic, frameable, and ruled by perspective; the inside world is paradoxically vast and unbounded."[13] Glynn says that the show is full of contradictions and she tried, "to play with the sense that there is no negative space. That the spaces between things are as deeply definitive as the things themselves."[14]
In 2023, Glynn exhibited two paintings at OCDChinatown gallery alongside paintings by the artist and poet Ser Serpas and the photographer Sam Penn (which included images of writer Thora Siemsen, a muse in Nan Goldin's work).[15][16][17]
Public collections
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Collins, Ann C. (October 4, 2022). "Nash Glynn with Ann C. Collins". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved October 30, 2022.
- ^ a b "Hari Nef on the art of Nash Glynn". Artforum. January 2021. Archived from the original on January 1, 2021. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
- ^ Nevins, Jake (February 28, 2023). "Three Girls Take One Gallery in a Sensual Show at OCDChinatown". Interview Magazine. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
- ^ "Nash Glynn". GAYLETTER. November 18, 2019. Retrieved October 30, 2022.
- ^ "Nash Glynn". New American Paintings. Archived from the original on September 27, 2020. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
- ^ "Nash Glynn", Talk Art, December 2, 2022, retrieved February 22, 2023
- ^ Patel, Alpesh Kantilal (February 14, 2020). ""Unexpected Encounters"". Artforum. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
- ^ "Nash Glynn Takes Charge of Her Own Image". Cultured Magazine. Archived from the original on May 26, 2022. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
- ^ "The Future is Fiction". PARTICIPANT INC. Retrieved October 30, 2022.
- ^ "What Defines Queer Art?". W Magazine. November 30, 2021. Retrieved October 30, 2022.
- ^ "The Leslie Lohman Artist Fellowship". Leslie-Lohman Museum of Art. Retrieved October 30, 2022.
- ^ "Student Spotlight: Nash Cohen Glynn '17". Columbia University School of the Arts. Archived from the original on June 21, 2017. Retrieved June 24, 2023.
- ^ "Nash Glynn: Interiors | Exhibitions | VIELMETTER LOS ANGELES". vielmetter.com. Retrieved October 31, 2022.
- ^ Collins, Ann C. (October 4, 2022). "Nash Glynn with Ann C. Collins". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved October 30, 2022.
- ^ "Its Personal". The New Yorker. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
- ^ "OCDCHINATOWN". Artforum. Retrieved February 22, 2023.
- ^ Nevins, Jake (February 28, 2023). "Three Girls Take One Gallery in a Sensual Show at OCDChinatown". Interview Magazine. Retrieved March 3, 2023.
- 1992 births
- Living people
- American video artists
- American transgender women
- American transgender artists
- American LGBTQ painters
- American LGBTQ photographers
- Transgender women artists
- Transgender painters
- Transgender photographers
- 21st-century American women painters
- 21st-century American painters
- 21st-century American women photographers
- 21st-century American photographers
- 21st-century American LGBTQ people