Nick van Woert is one of the names often mentioned during conversations about Nevada-bred artists who have gone on to proverbial bigger and better things after leaving the state. He graduated from Reno High School in 1997, earned a bachelorโs degree from the University of Oregon, studying architecture, then moved back to Reno for a few years before moving to New York in 2005 to attend Parsons the New School for Design. Heโs been based in New York ever since, working full time as an artist and attracting international acclaim. In 2014, he had high-profile solo exhibitions in Italy and the Netherlands. And from January 29 to April 9, his solo exhibition Pink Elephants on Parade will be on display at the University of Nevada, Renoโs Sheppard Contemporary gallery.
The exhibition includes several large untitled sculptures. Most of van Woertโs work is an investigation of materials. Heโs a sculptor, but he views his work as connected to the traditions of landscape paintingโart that aspires to recreate the beauties of the natural world.
โThereโs only two types of beauty, in a sense,โ he said. โThereโs natural beauty, which is this uncontrollable, unpredictable beauty, and thereโs man-made beauty, which is tools and machinery.โ
Like landscape painters, van Woertโs sculptures often draw direct inspiration from the artistโs environment, but van Woert acknowledges that his immediate environment is urban, so he often makes art using materials like cleaning products and cat litter. Some of his work is an investigation of synthetic materials made to replace natural materialsโlike how cat litter is a manufactured substitute for soil.
โI have this running catalog of materials that we have made as replacements for natural ones,โ he said. โIf you want to go pee, you go pee outside in the dirt. But, we have cat litter.โ
One sculpture in the exhibition is a chair made from plexiglass cases with different materials, including cat litter and pulverized plastic, layered like sedimentary rock in shifting, uncontrolled patterns. Itโs an example of a man-made artwork that unexpectedly evokes the beauty of the natural world.
As an artist who investigates materials, van Woert has had misadventures with materials that have gone bad, specifically horror stories about exploding containers of domestic materials, like chlorine.
โI started to see the comfort these materials can provide as a camouflage for the violence underneath,โ he said.
His work seems to comment on the different levels of value that humans place on materialsโthe disposability of domestic products, the volatility of plastics, or the often overlooked beauty of tree bark. His interest in materials is rooted in his architectural background.
โBuildings that were made a thousand years ago are still here,โ he said. โOnes that were made 40 years ago arenโt here. Weโre constantly driven to create these newer materials. โฆ Plastic has a certain immortality to it. It will never die, but itโs not going to last as long as stone, probably. And weโre on a planet made of stone. Itโs in no short supply.โ
One sculpture is a nonfunctional steel recreation of van Woertโs pulverizer. Itโs an object that was designed for strict utility, but van Woert sees beauty in the shape and geometry of the design. Itโs a form of beauty that contrasts with and complements the other sculptures in the exhibition.
โItโs not supposed to be aesthetic, but thereโs something about it,โ he said. โIt wasnโt designed to be beautiful; it was designed to serve a purpose, but thereโs something so amazing about that. โฆ With certain industrial machinery, thereโs a beauty to it.โ
