
Nan Hass Feldman
Nan Hass Feldman's work reflects a love of art history and a direct response to and interpretation of the culture, architecture, landscape, and aesthetics of place. She interprets everything through her screen of selective seeing, playful detail, heightened color, and bits of fantasy. For Feldman, art is really about enhancing and interpreting reality to create a more optimistic and joyous world.
Feldman's two main techniques include water-soluble oil paints and three mediums on paper. Her mixed-media works are begun outdoors with charcoal drawings that are then outlined in colored wax C'aran d'Ache crayons. Next she adds oil pastels, then watercolor, which fills in any spaces and creates texture. Her oil paintings are thick, richly colored, and scribed into with color shapers.
Nan Hass Feldman grew up in Brooklyn and took classes at the Brooklyn Museum from ages three through ten. In her teens, she visited art museums in Manhattan (MOMA, the Met, Whitney) almost every Saturday with her best friend. Feldman went on to get her BFA from the State University of New York at Buffalo, an MA from Goddard College, and an MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts, majoring in painting.