The abstractions of Nannette Acker Clark are rooted in her African American heritage and focus on her concern with color and spatial relationships. Untitled is an offset lithograph in which the background is printed green. Attached are six rows of patterned, undulating, and intense waves of color that interlock like a puzzle.From the Artist
My work is inspired by contemporary fiber and sculpture concepts, various cultural design traditions, and my personal experiences as an African American woman growing up in this country. After years of making realistic, figurative sculpture, I enrolled in graduate school and began working with fiber and mixed media. During this time, I began utilizing strong colors, cross-cultural symbols and intricate patterns, and developed a new, very different style of sculpture.
My current body of work, entitled "Four Moments of the Sun" explores the connection between physical and spiritual communication. The series is divided into four parts that present my view of the spiritual stages of life as expressed by the Kongo People of Zaire. Dawn is the beginning, Noon the flourishing of life and the point of ascending power, Sunset the end of life, and Midnight the place where those who have lived well dwell until they return again, in the Dawn, as succeeding generations.
—Excerpted from https://www.leeway.org/grantees/nannette_acker_clark_bba_99, accessed 7/6/2021
Philadelphia sculptor Nannette Acker Clark earned a BFA from the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA), Philadelphia, and an MFA from University of the Arts, Philadelphia.
Clark has exhibited widely at institutions throughout th...