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"Katy Nail's remarkable portrait
paintings are veiled exercises in abstract composition
with a context of near-surrealism.
There is a pleasingly peculiar emotional quality to her work
that compels repeated viewing -- perhaps her obsession with
qualities of form and painterly effects drains the passion
from her figures. The resulting dispassionate effect is fascinating,
like an emotional Frigidaire."
Mel McCombie, art critic
Austin American-Statesman
"In Katy Nail's "Carmen's Painting",
symbols that recall Native American, Mexican, and European
iconography conspire to render what appears to be a rite
of passage, symbolized by a young woman's crossing of
a river.....The notion of self, which has been a concern
for artists throughout Western history and an ongoing
issue over much of the century, has in the last decade
or two taken on a particular urgency. This exhibition
is a testament of its time."
Lynn Zelevansky, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Painting
and Sculpture
Museum of Modern Art, New York
"....Her paintings are neither illustrations of
actual scenes, nor narratives that tell us what is happening:
they are moments of mystery in which the artist focuses
our gaze upon line, shape and color, upon the formal
elements of painting. Nail succeeds in holding us in
an uneasy balance between the real and the abstract in
her work."
Monica F. Kindraka, Curator
Austin Museum of Art (Laguna Gloria Art Museum),
Austin, Texas
"The most satisfying thing about Austin visual
art is not its museums or galleries or service organizations,
but rather its artists. While it ignited the intended
debate about value in contemporary art, XL's "Ranking
Austin's visual artists" educated this reporter
about the wealth of native talent here. (It took two
years and lots of help to research.) For every sketchy,
ill-considered exhibit in Austin, I also saw sumptuous
paintings by Melissa Miller or Judy Jensen, unsettling
images by William Wilborn or Katy Nail.....It is the
art, its makers and the audiences who dedicate their
precious time to embracing it that embody Austin's artistic
spirit."
Michael Barnes, Arts Editor
Austin American-Statesman
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