Artist's Statement Nina is a painter, ceramicist, critic and performance artist extraordinaire, believing in both the process and the finished product. Nina works in various mediums. She is a painter of portraits, still life, animals, birds and important larger collage works with found object in oil on board. Nina's art is an intertwined collaboration of reflecton on herself but she is also a reflectionof her art. Lively, controversial, challenging, engaging - Nina Romm is a well-known public personally in South Africa. Reports on her varied artistis production her commitment to social transformation, and her creativity workshops - as well as on-going television and radio interviews sustain interest in both her creative work, and her response to topical issues. Her work reflects her interest in a polyvalent and pluralistic* reading of both life and art *{Pluralism: (Ref Joseph Beuys and Judy Chicago) - in both of whose life-work there is a commitment to the artistic process {with a re-examination of both stylistic and technical options} as well as engagement in the political/social arena, and the impetus to positive evolution.} Opposing reductive categorization, and authoritarian perspectives in both art and politics, her work is exceptionally versatile, ranging from the complex and multi-layered mixed-media/collage works 'The African Alchemies: Tree Of Life Series' dealing with overlays of culture, history, and personal memory operative at the close of the millennium (with specific references to South Africa and the African Continent) - to her whimsical cat paintings, which she refers to as "an ongoing ode to my personal darling, shollie-Wollie, who recently died - and a tribute to felines in general, who teach us so many things about domesticity and the wild; the tactics of seduction; and the symbolic realm of the unconscious." She has also readdressed the notion of still-life, through an ongoing series exploring trinkets and "objects of beauty" both African and from other cultures. Her oeuvre over the past 30 years has also incorporated bronze sculpture and ceramic plates, as well as Performance Art in the 70's and 80's {including 'Strawberries and Cream on the Tail of the Hyena - performed at the Grahamstown Festival in 1987, and the 'Pond of Amnesia' set.) She was one of the 'alternative judges' chosen by the artistic community for the last Rembrandt Triennial. She is often invited to open Exhibition, and she presents Creativity Workshops both to artists and other groupings, including corporations, social transformation agents, architects, etc. Her overseas sabbatical research program in 1984 addressed Performance Art as an extension of options within the Visual Arts - with significant implications for both artists and non-artists, providing a methodology for creative individual and social transformation. On her return from this research program she lectured extensively throughout South Africa on these issues. Her interest in the psychology of cultural manifestations; the response of the viewer, and visual/linguistic entry-points for the work of art is also evidenced by her use of titles to expand viewing depth. While the works function self-sufficiently, the titles invoide further poetic speculations, creating, in totality, another 'extended poem' available for reflection. This is compatible with a view that shuns harsh divisions. Between art and life; between politics and culture; between 'high art' and 'craft'. She describes her life as a "plea for a more multivalent and enriched undersanding of life and art - which moves beyond the abusive reductivisms of Apartheid, to a deeper embracement of individualty and diversity." Her work in the political arena has focused on social injustices, and the imperative for ongoing awareness, involvement and critical engagement in the process of transformation by all members of society - based not on a simplistic polarization of before/bad v now/good, but rather on continual vigilance regarding evolving political and social realities. In her artistic production, the right to individual idiosyncrasy, and a responsibility to personal transformation directs the process. 1984 1977 - 87 Extended Social/Cultural Involvement Selected Exhibitions 1975 - 2005 Her work "
unapologetically operates in the realm of hyperbole. Wit becomes the scalpel with which we can dissect our deepest pathologies, with which we may excavate our secular and mythical memory, the overlays of individual and collective fantasy. Romm's world is at once real and staged." Neville Hoad, Author and Academic
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