New Version of Website is Finished.

I'm happy to announce that the new version of my www.paulnitsche.com website is complete. In it you will find updated galleries of my sculpture, paper dolls, automata, and drawings and prints. There are two new major sections: Illustration and Design, and Comics. The majority of these works are from the 1990s to 2005 and much had to be scanned and digitized.

In the Design section you will find all the music packaging work I did for the Dazzling Killmen, Oneiroid Psychosis, Andrew Bird, and others. In some cases I re-created digital versions of the designs from the original layout sheets and photographs. Here you will also find a Patterns section containing the majority of the pattern work I have done over the years.

The Comics section contains galleries of nearly all of the comics I did during 1991 to 1995. There is everything from the early self published works to the comics I did for Fantagraphics Books, Caliber Press, and Dark Horse Comics. These were exciting, creative, and busy years for me, and much of what I was drawing during that time developed into the sculptures I do now.

Looking back on the older work has put me in a nostalgic mood. I'm very thankful to all the bands, publishers, and individuals that I have worked with, many of whom I am still in touch. A major thank you goes to Mark Fischer and Rob Syers who let me into their Skin Graft collective, which lead to the Skin Graft comic, Dazzling Killmen, and many other projects.



Ossis Fateor Memoria

Figure 15.- Ossis Fateor Memoria. (Bone Confesses Memory)
2013-2015. 24”h x 15”w x 15”d.
Human bone, Bronze, Wood, Resin, Acrylic, Cast glass, Bell jar, Gold leaf, Silk, Hardware.

 

This is the second bell jar, Memory, in the series having to do with Dream, Memory, and Experience.

Memory is so individualistic, and it was difficult to rest on images to depict this idea. I eventually became intrigued with the concept of fetal memory- something we have all shared but is now lost to us. It is at once mutual and absent. How does auditory and vibratory stimulus feed a growing mind? In some murky state of being, we once knew.

 

Special thanks to some individuals who assisted me with this piece: Richard Jones and Studio Paran for work on the bell jar, Steve Feren for his help with the cast glass placenta, Ed Wohl for spray finishing the base, and always to Bill Lemke for his photography work.

An Osteal Craft- Gallery Talk at the Freeport Art Museum

On January 14, 2016 I will be speaking at the Freeport Art Museum regarding my scupltures involving human bone. It is a members only event but anyone is welcome to join the museum before the night of the talk. Thank you to everyone at the museum for giving me the opportunity.

An Osteal Craft

Gallery Talk with Paul Nitsche
 

January 14th at the Freeport Art Museum

http://www.freeportartmuseum.com

5:00 - 5:30 p.m. Refreshments
5:30 - 6:30 p.m.  Paul Nitsche presentation

 
Join FAM as we welcome featured Regional Juried Exhibition Artist, Paul Nitsche for a talk on his use of human bone in his work. Paul will discuss what led him to this development, the issues that arise in using human remains and how he acquires bones.