Nielsen Gallery
The Nielsen Art Gallery in Boston represent over 40 contemporary artists from around the world that work in painting, sculpture, printmaking and drawings. The gallery runs about 11 exhibitions a year focusing on either the individual or a theme. We would recommend visiting the website to find out more information on the exhibition timetable.
There is a non-intimidating atmosphere here and the gallery staff are more than happy to help you brush up on your knowledge (excuse the pun). They are well knowledged in the artists and the collections of work available here.
These artists include Sachiko Akiyama, Gregory Gillespie, Mario Kon, Duane Slick, Gregory Amenoff, Stephen Greene, Dexter Lazenby, Jane Smaldone, Jake Berthot, Anne Harris, John Lees, Joan Snyder, Forest Bess, Mildred Howard, Sam Messer, Tanya Steinberg, James Cambronne, Sedrick Huckaby, Nathalie Miebach, Sergio Teran, Squeak Carnwath, Laurel Hughes, Naoto Nakagawa, John Walker, Robert Contois, Ralph Humphrey, Mel Pekarsky, Christopher Wilmarth, Damien DiBona, Jon Imber, Katherine Porter, Susan Wilmarth-Rabineau, Porfirio DiDonna, Bill Jensen, Harvey Quaytman, Albert York, Arthur Dove, Sungjoon Joh, Fernando Ramos Prida, Neil Fearnley, Carol Keller, Robert Rohm, Maureen Gallace, Roger Kizik and Vincent Sferrazza.
From the Nielsen Gallery website – all credit Nielsen Gallery:
Nielsen Gallery was founded in 1963 and is located in the historic Back Bay district of Boston at 179 Newbury Street. The directors of the gallery are Nina Nielsen, John Baker, and Josh Buckno.
In 2005, the AICA awarded “The Privilege of Solitude: Alfred Jensen and Forrest Bess” the national award for “Best Show in a Commercial Gallery.” Other major exhibitions have included “Forty Four Psychoanalytic Drawings (1939-41)” of Jackson Pollock, “The Self-Reliant Spirit,” (Albert Pinkam Ryder, Ralph Albert Blakelock, Arthur Dove, Marsden Hartley and four contemporary artists), and survey exhibitions of Albert York and Martin Ramirez.
The primary commitment of the gallery is to exhibit and support contemporary artists, whose personal visions resist categorization, including the estates of Porfirio DiDonna, Gregory Gillespie, Harvey Quaytman, and Christopher Wilmarth.
179 Newbury Street,
Boston,
MA 02116
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