Nell
Blaine, painter of still lifes and landscapes in brilliant colors,
created abstract work that gives the appearance of being done
in a carefree, totally lighthearted manner but in fact is the
result of years of disciplined study. It is also an effect achieved
after rehabilitation from polio, which nearly took her life.
Suffering
a paralyzed right hand, she taught herself to paint with her left
hand, and she devoted much time to applying colors, some times
as many as fifty varieties. She attributed her fascination with
color with its discovery when she was two years old and corrective
eye surgery allowed her to see color for the first time.
Blaine
was raised in the Richmond, Virginia, where she grew to hate the
prevalent racial discrimination and left home at an early age.
In high school, she was skilled enough to begin selling her artwork,
which was mostly posters and portraits. She attended the Richmond
School of Art, now Virginia Commonwealth University, between 1939
and 1942 but left its classical realist curriculum when one of
the instructors introduced her to modern art.
She
used money she had earned from commercial art and went to New
York and studied with Hans Hofmann, teacher of Abstract Expressionism.
Shortly after, she married a jazz musician and immersed herself
in the world of jazz, beating drums and improvising expressive
dances, and associating with Charlie Parker, Dizzie Gillespie,
and Beat Generation writer Jack Kerouac. Her paintings of that
time reflect her strong developing sense of relationship between
jazz and abstract art.
In
1944 at age twenty two, she became the youngest member of the
American Abstract Artists and exhibited hard-edged geometric paintings,
mostly black and white with accents of bright colors. She joined
a cooperative of abstract artists and worked so hard at organizing
shows that some referred to it as the Blaine Street Gallery.
She
was a strong personality who had special influence on Larry Rivers
and Jane Freilicher and appeared to thrive in the New York art
scene of the 1940s. However, she decided that her lifestyle was
unhealthy, and she left the city, had a period of seclusion, and
then went to France where she admired the work of Gustave Courbet,
Jean Antoine Watteau, Eugene Delacroix, and Nicholas Poussin and
took up figurative art in an abstract style.
She
became known as a "painterly realist," and added landscapes
and interiors to her subject matter. She earned fellowships to
Yaddo and the MacDowell Colony and began spending at least half
the year in Gloucester, Massachusetts. She also traveled in Mexico.
In
1959 on the island of Mykonos, Greece, she had polio. Her New
York art friends in an exhibition of seventy-one artists raised
money for extensive treatment at Mount Sinai Hospital. After recovery,
she settled in a studio on Riverside Drive, spent her summers
in Gloucester, and painted from her wheelchair. She died in 1996
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