Alice In Wonderland Exhibit
In 1975, Nall discovered the enchanting and mysterious "Alice鈥檚 Adventures in Wonderland" and "Through the Looking Glass". He read and studied the text with great passion, intrigued by the author, Lewis Carroll, and the main character, Alice. Nall consequently embarked on the creation of what can be hailed as the most important series of his lifetime, 鈥淎lice in Wonderland,鈥 in 1977 through 1979.
Having spent the prior decade perfecting pencil drawing techniques at Ecole des Beaux-Arts
in Paris and the University of Alabama, as well as being mentored by surrealist painter
Salvador Dali, Nall produced this series of artistically stunning pencil drawings
with invented techniques and exquisite detail.
The mesmerizing kingdom portrayed in the novels by Carroll, as well as the persona
of the author himself, captured Nall鈥檚 full attention, influencing him to jump down
his own 鈥渞abbit hole.鈥 To illustrate his unique perspective on the story, Nall traveled
the globe searching for those who would serve as his whimsical characters, which included
friends, politicians and even royalty. While reminiscent of Carroll's famed scenes,
Nall's 鈥淎lice" and accompanying characters explore what is unique to Nall's youthful
explorations and deviations in a manner that is both fantastical and provocative.
Nall often wanders into the frames of the series, obscured by makeup, leading viewers
on an unsettling, complex, and humorous journey. The 鈥渞abbit hole鈥 Nall propels his
viewers into allows them to ponder their own 鈥渨onderland鈥 that they live in and the
passages they experience. Nall was brave enough to look in the mirror and document
his world through a glass that exposes the true raw nature of his youthful days, reflecting
that we鈥檙e all running to beat the clock of life, much like the dash of the Mad Hatter.
* This exhibit is recommended for mature audiences.
View the Exhibit with Nall
Nall鈥檚 鈥楢lice in Wonderland鈥 exhibit premieres at IAC
About the Museum & Gallery
Over the course of his career, world-renowned artist Nall Hollis has collected his most important work to have on permanent display in his hometown of Troy, Alabama. The Nall Museum boasts work from all stages in the artist's life. His artistic talent is on display through media ranging from etchings, graphite, oil paint, watercolor, textile, sterling silver, porcelain, found objects and wood. Nall's art combines botanical elements of the American South, European opulence and Mexican craft in a collection that will give visitors a glimpse into the artist's imagination.
Hear Nall talk about individual artworks he gifted to the 麻豆网站列表 permanent art collection
Bio and Artist Statement
Nall, who was born in Troy, Alabama, in 1948, is a modern-day renaissance man who has created extraordinary works of art for 50 years. A multi-talented fine artist, he has traveled the world studying diverse cultures and exploring art, architecture and indigenous craft. Recent retrospective exhibitions of Nall鈥檚 work were exhibited at the Mobile Museum of Art, Mobile, Alabama, Miami Dade College, Miami, Florida, Menton Museum of Art, Menton, France, The Basilica of St. Francis in Assisi, the Museum of St. Augustine Pietrasanta, Italy, and The National Arts Club, New York City. The artwork in the exhibitions includes finely detailed drawings, remarkable botanical paintings and prints, complex mosaics, graphite portraits encased in elaborate frames, intricate line engravings and masterful watercolors. Exhibitions of Nall鈥檚 work have circulated the globe.
In addition to fine art, Nall鈥檚 work extends to the world of design as well. He has completed commissions in porcelain, Murano glassware and jewelry. His artwork was also chosen for a series of official postage stamps for the Principality of Monaco.
Nall鈥檚 designs also extend into the theatrical scene with his set and costumes for the Puccini Opera in Italy. His work reaches great proportions in his fifteen-foot-high white dove entitled 鈥淰iolata Pax鈥(Wounded Peace) which invites the viewer to reflect on opposing forces of peace and war in our society. Nall created the NALL Foundation and the N.A.L.L. Art Association which helps educate artists, writers and musicians and instill within them a sober work ethic, while gaining experience as working artists.
Many years of study at the University of Alabama and in Paris鈥 Ecole Nationale des Beaux Arts improved my aesthetic and technical skills, as did observing human limits through political science and psychology. Having a mentor of Salvador Dali validated my audacity. These rebellious years of traveling and working in Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, India and Mexico gave me varied perspectives and experiences where I gathered many sources of aesthetic patinas. Setting technical rules for myself such as 鈥渘ot gluing any object on a surface until I could render it鈥 and 鈥渄raw from life until I could draw the hair growing from the head鈥 helped direct an innate concentration for detail and collage. Mosaics from Carthage, Istanbul and Byblos enriched my eggshell and mirror mosaics from Mexico. Art inspires me especially when it has spiritual symbolism; from feeling the carved etchings of caves from prehistoric times to collecting today鈥檚 troubled icons of Alabama Outsider Art.
You can visit him in his studio located at 414 Equality Ave., Fairhope, Alabama.
MossaNall Dialogues
Described by many as a 鈥渕odern-day Mossa,鈥 Nall鈥檚 newest exhibit combines his slant on symbolist painting with that of French illustrator, playwright, essayist, curator and symbolist artist Gustav-Adolf Mossa, who died in 1971. Much of Mossa鈥檚 symbolist period focused on his reaction to the turn-of-the-century (1900-1911) boom of socialite leisure activity on the French Riviera, comically satirizing or condemning what was viewed as an increasingly materialistic society and the perceived dangers of the 鈥渘ew woman.鈥
Nall鈥檚 own artistry has been expressed through mosaics, including the monumental 鈥淪unrise & Sunset Pensee,鈥 hanging in Monaco鈥檚 Grimaldi Forum; sculptures including the 鈥淰iolata Pax,鈥 in Assisi and Pietrasanta, Italy, and in Troy; line engravings, some of which are in the permanent collections of the Boston Museum of Art and the Museum of Pau, France; porcelain, including three dinnerware designs for Haviland and Parlon of Limoges, France; sets and costumes, including those for operas performed in Italy; and carpets, consisting of tapestries hand-woven in silk and wool for Kamyar Moghadam in Monte Carlo, Monaco.
A 1997 book, 鈥淣all-Mossa/Eros & Agapa鈥 by Jean Forneris, and published by Galerie-Musee Raoul Dufy/Mus茅es de la N.A.L.L. Art Association, compares Nall鈥檚 work to that of Mossa鈥檚.