Nick Miller (artist)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Nick Miller
Nick Miller, Sligo studio
Born (1962-08-02) 2 August 1962 (age 61)
London, England
Occupation(s)Visual artist, painter
Websitenickmiller.ie

Nick Miller (born 1962 in London) is an Irish contemporary artist who has become known for reinvigorating painting and drawing in the traditional genres of portraiture, landscape and still-life.[1] He has developed an intense and individual approach to the practice of working directly from life, that has been described as a form of encounter painting.[2][3]

Biography

In 1984, after graduating in

Irish Art, he was elected to Aosdána
in 2001.

Exhibitions

Significant solo museum exhibitions of his work have taken place at the

New York Studio School
.

Career

In 1997 he converted a truck, a mobile British Telecom workshop, into a mobile studio, facilitating work on large-scale paintings and drawings in the landscape, yet protected from the elements. He began to gain critical recognition in the early 2000s exhibiting work that tackled the traditionally conservative tradition of Irish

The Irish Museum of Modern Art
.

Portraiture, and the formal meeting with his subject is a central tenet of Miller's practice influencing his approach to all genres of painting. For the artist, the artwork is the remains of a lived and painted encounter.[15] In a seminal series of large scale CLOSER[16] drawings made from 1996-2000 and shown in Dublin[17] and London[18][19] Miller drew his subjects, mostly close family and friends to make unconventional portraits including Corban (1996), Collection of IMMA,[20] of the Irish artist Corban Walker. These drawings were made at very close quarters, exploring a single point perspective, face to face and straddling the subjects on the paper they were being drawn on the floor.

Amongst subjects, both well known and unknown, Miller has painted the author

Donal Lunny for the National Portrait Collection, and was given for his 2013 painting "Last sitting: Portrait of Barrie Cooke",[24] a fellow artist, and friend of Miller's who died in 2014.[25] Both paintings are in the collection of the National Gallery of Ireland
.

In 2014 he was invited by the Irish Museum of Modern Art to respond to the donated studio contents of the renowned Irish portrait and still life painter Edward McGuire (1932–1986), now in the museum's collection. Miller took up residency in the museum, spending time with McGuire's work studio contents and personal belongings. During the residency, he made a series of still life paintings of objects and the many stuffed birds that Mcguire was renowned for painting. McGuire had died not long after Miller settled in Dublin, in 1986. As a way to connect to the man, he had not met, but whose work Miller admired, he invited a number of McGuires sitters to come and sit for him in IMMA and talk about Edward, often over 30 years later. These included Theresa Browne, Garech Browne, Wanda Ryan, and the poets Anthony Cronin and Paul Durcan. The resulting exhibition at the museum: Nick Miller and the Studio of Edward McGuire (November 2016 -May 2016)[26] featured both artists' works on similar subjects, and an installation of McGuire's studio belongings with a film made by Miller about McGuire's renowned "Colour Dictionary"[27][28]

In the same way that Miller attempts to reinvigorate traditions around landscape and portraiture, he continues to evolve the genre of the 'still life', often merging still life with portraiture.[29] In more recent years, since 2011 he began to return to painting elements of nature, flowers, weeds, branches and even seaweed, placed in a variety of vases. Initially painted on a domestic scale, this series of works are known as Vessels: Nature Morte. Jackie Wullschläger describes the paintings: "Still life is always about holding time, but Miller's swiftly executed paintings also convey growth to decay, almost surreally speeded up: flowers bloom, glisten, wilt within each rapid painterly performance." [30] They were painted over a number of years as a way to hold a connection to his dying mother. In the more the recent Rootless paintings [31] Miller works with experiences of disintegration and order, as he takes the still lives to a monumental scale, affirming the primacy of 'Nature' as a true and vital reality.[32]

References

  1. ^ [1]- Financial Times, Critics Choice, 17th Feb 2019 - Jackie Wullschläger
  2. ^ [3]- The Truth of the Encounter. Nick Miller Interview with Joanne Laws. Visual Artist Newsletter March 2019
  3. ^ [4] - Irish Museum of Modern Art - Nick Miller and the Studio of Edward McGuire | Nov 2015 - May 2016.
  4. ^ [5] - The Irish Times, article by Aidan Dunne
  5. ^ [6] - Figure to Ground at the RHA Gallery, Dublin (2003)
  6. ^ [7] - Truckscapes Exhibited at the RHA Gallery, Dublin (2003), Limerick City Gallery (2007), Centre Culturel Irlandais, Paris (2008), and New York Studio School (2008)
  7. ^ [8] - Washington Post article by Blake Gopnik
  8. ^ [9] - NYSS - Truckscapes, essay by David Cohen (art critic)
  9. ^ [10] - NYSS - Truckscapes Drawings, Essay by Peter Plagens on Nick Miller.
  10. ^ [11] - NYSS - Truckscapes Drawings, Essay by Peter Plagens on Nick Miller.
  11. The View (Irish TV series)
  12. ^ "From Cogan's Shed".
  13. ^ "Whitethorn, truck view | Nick Miller".
  14. ^ [13]- Miller's Crossing. Interview with Brian McAvera, Irish Arts Review, Vol 32, 2015
  15. ^ [14] - Official website - CLOSER : Drawings before the end (1996-2000)
  16. ^ [15]- Portraits worth lying for. Review, Aidan Dunne, The Irish Times 26/1/2000
  17. ^ [16]- Nick Miller-Art Space Gallery, London. Review, Richard Ingleby, The Independent 8/4/2000
  18. ^ [17]- CLOSER at Art Space Gallery, London. ‘Whats On’. Review, Fisun Guner, 3/5/2000
  19. ^ [18]- Corban (1996) 152.4 x 122cm, Collection of Irish Museum of Modern Art
  20. ^ [19] Archived 11 March 2019 at the Wayback Machine- Portrait of John McGahern (1998), Niland Collection, The Model, Sligo
  21. ^ [20]- Portrait of John Hogan(2004), Collection of Hugh Lane, Dublin City Gallery
  22. ^ [21] - RTÉ News, 11 November 2014.
  23. ^ [22] - Hennessy Portrait Prize 2014, National Gallery of Ireland.
  24. ^ [23] - Arena: RTÉ Radio 1 Interview with Nick Miller.
  25. ^ [24] - Official website : - Nick Miller and the studio of Edward McGuire, IMMA, Nov 2015-May 2016
  26. ^ [25] - IMMA Collection : Nick Miller and the studio of Edward McGuire, Irish Museum of Modern Art, Nov 2015-May 2016
  27. ^ [26] - - An unusual artistic inheritance pays off, Aidan Dunne, The Irish Times, 3/12/15
  28. ^ [27] - Noreen with Polaroid is a 1994 work by Nick Miller, part of the IMMA Permanent Collection.
  29. ^ [28] - Financial Times, Critics Choice, 3/9/16 Jackie Wullschläger
  30. ^ [29] - Official Website: Rootless: new paintings
  31. ISBN 978-0-9957524-8-1 What you are looking at is leaving. Essay by Martin Gayford
    ,

External links