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Olav Nielsen
Familiar yet otherworldly, Olav Nielsen’s meticulously worked images embrace memories and dream. They are distinctively of New Zealand, but at the same time have an edge, a feeling of a not-quite-familiar place, just as a dream is true and not true at the same time.
In only 8 years since graduating from Otago Polytechnic, this Danish-born, Dunedin-based printmaker has reaped accolades for his mastery of the meticulous craft of aquatint and mezzotint, in the exquisite play of glowing light and shadow in his work. Extraordinary is an understatement in describing his printmaking, often in large works of intense colour that stretch the very limits of the craft.
Recent Work 
Until 18 February 2009, Olav Nielsen’s exhibition Afterglow is at the MVH Gallery, in the entrance hall gallery at the Marlborough Vintners Hotel (10 minutes from Blenheim). Some additional works are in the restaurant space. Viewing open to the public every day from 10am-5pm.
In this series, Olav Nielsen uses colonial architecture – especially the New Zealand villa – and southern landscape as frameworks for an exploration of the psyche, tapping into his dreams, and allowing the viewer to connect with their own memories, journeys and sense of self.
‘The villas are both an expression of New Zealand culture and an image of the psyche with its compartments, structures and face to the world. Our homes provide both containment and definition for the life lived inside; walls and hedges make permeable boundaries between our private and public lives.
I have been documenting my dreams for the past twelve years, a process which has become an essential part of my creative life. The themes and imagery in my work are a blending of dreams and the places and spaces of my everyday life. The works themselves are a kind of conversation space where I explore my internal dynamics through light and shadow.’
– Artist’s statement, Olav Nielsen, 2008
Several works focus on Victorian villas, with light gleaming out through stained glass windows or streaming into bare hallways; small details and a lone dog cast long shadows, a suggestion of history filtering into the present. The untamed landscape and sparse native plants sweep hard up against the cultivated gardens and pathways of the villas, suggesting a place of retreat or oasis, yet his worlds are unpopulated other than by the lone dog, or a heron.
Small details – shoes, washing on the line, suggest recent human occupation. His works featuring fish explore depths unseen beneath the waves, the creatures distinctly otherworldly, surfacing towards the light like the psyche.
He is now evolving these into a new series exploring surreal moments of detail and beauty in the natural world.
For further information about the artist or his technique please contact exhibition director Barbara Speedy. Also for other images currently available (not all are shown on the website). More About the Artist 
Danish-born, Olav Nielsen emigrated to New Zealand aged 12 in 1990, and there is a palpable essence of both Europe and New Zealand in his work. That unique vision, and especially his outstanding craftsmanship as a hands-on printmaker, has established a strong reputation already with collectors and peers. His mezzotints and aquatints are in demand with collectors here and overseas, and he is regarded as a young talent going from strength to strength, and one to watch for the future.
Much of his work arises from culture shock: a young boy adjusting to the shift from Denmark to New Zealand, trying to determine his true identity. The hallways of the villas are transitional spaces, with doors leading into rooms like the compartments of identity and memory, their contents not quite known but suggested, streaming through a window, glimpsed through a doorway, suggested behind a billowing curtain. Pathways and hedges barely fence out the wildness of the untamed New Zealand landscape, powerful sweeping shifts in weather, the villa and its garden an oasis of civilisation. Long shadows cast the past into the present and imply the future; colours are seductive yet edgy.
Light glows from beneath the work in what has already become Nielsen’s signature, a technique in printmaking he has evolved since his time as a student at the renowned printmaking school of Otago Polytechnic.
He graduated Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2000 and has since exhibited in more than 20 solo and group shows around New Zealand, and in 2007 was Printer in Residence under the programme run by Special Collections, University of Otago Library, illustrating poems by the late Hone Tuwhare.
His work is held in public collections in Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch and Dunedin, and in private collections in New Zealand, Australia, Canada, the USA and Denmark.
Please contact us to confirm current prices: most prices are posted at the time of exhibition, and may be revised as the artists’ values increase. |
Works Available
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Hatchlings
mezzotint, original print and plate, pencil drawing 2010
360x210mm
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Iris
mezzotint, burnished aquatint, print & plate, pencil 2010
430x650 (image area)
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Discovered
mezzotint 2010
420x160mm
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Uncovered
mezzotint, ed of 14 2010
250x125 (image area)
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Still
mezzotint 2008
360x210mm
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Light Body
burnished aquatint, ed of 8 2005
640x295mm
SOLD |
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Half Moon
burnished aquatint, ed of 10 2007
615x235mm (image area)
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Grey Heron
burnished aquatint, ed of 10, 2007
620x240mm (image area)
SOLD |
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Divinve Streams
burnished aquatint, ed of 10 2007
610x230mm
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Night Flight
burnished aquatint, print-and-plate 2009
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