Nils Norman

Nils Norman (born 1966) is an artist living in London. He works across the disciplines of public art, architecture and urban planning. His projects challenge notions of the function of public art and the efficacy of mainstream urban planning and large-scale regeneration. Informed by local politics and ideas on alternative economic, ecological systems and play, Norman’s work merges utopian alternatives with current urban design to create a humorous critique of the discrete histories and functions of public art and urban planning. Norman is a Professor at the Royal Danish Academy of Art and Design, Copenhagen, Denmark, where he leads the School of Walls and Space.[1]

Life and career

Early life

Norman was born Sevenoaks, Kent, England in 1966 and lived there until 1979. In 1979 his parents moved to Bexhill, East Sussex. He attended Bexhill High School, Bexhill Sixth Form College and he did his Art Foundation at Hastings College of Arts and Technology. He studied fine Art Painting BA Hons at St. Martins School of Art in London. After graduating in 1989 he moved to Cologne, Germany. There he lived for three years and collaborated with the artists Stephan Dillemuth and Josef Strau at the experimental storefront project Friesenwall 120, during this time Norman also set up a small gallery space in London, which later became Milch. In Cologne Norman worked for one year assisting the German painter Gerhard Richter in his atelier.

Norman founded an experimental space called Poster Studio on Charing Cross Road, London. This space was a collaborative effort with Merlin Carpenter and Dan Mitchell. In 1998 in New York he set up Parasite, together with the artist Andrea Fraser, a collaborative artist led initiative that developed an archive for site-specific projects.[2]

Norman's first US exhibition was at the Pat Hearn Gallery in Chelsea (with Denis Balk and Simon Leung), after which he began to be represented by the late Colin Deland at American Fine Arts.

Public works

Norman exhibits and generates projects and collaborations in museums and galleries internationally.[3]

Norman has completed major public art projects, including a pedestrian bridge, small playgrounds and a landscaping project for the City of Roskilde, Denmark http://urban-matters.org/projectsbyindividuals/the-trekkroner-art-plan-project. He has participated in various biennials worldwide and has developed commissions for SculptureCenter, Long Island City, (http://www.sculpture-center.org/exhibitionsExhibition.htm?id=11909) NY; London Underground, UK (http://art.tfl.gov.uk/project/2439/); Tate Modern, UK ; Loughborough University, UK; Creative Time http://www.dismalgarden.com/sites/default/files/eva_diaz_grey_room_0.pdf, NYC and the Centre d’ Art Contemporain, Geneva, Switzerland.

In 2007, his work was on show at Tate Modern in the Global Cities exhibition, his presentation featured a series of posters displaying ecological and environmental information.[4] In her 2006 survey Beyond Green, Stephanie Smith highlighted Norman's interest in the apparent homogenization of urban spaces resultant from regeneration projects.[5] It has been claimed that "Norman’s work has been compared to the urban projects of artists such as Claes Oldenburg, Robert Smithson, Gordon Matta-Clark, and Krzysztof Wodiczko.".[6] He has been a regular contributor to Mute magazine.[7] Nils Norman takes inspiration from the work of anarchist theorist Colin Ward, going as far as experimenting with Ward's 1973 book "Streetwork".[8] Norman has also referenced the efforts of Cedric Price, especially those set forth in Price's "Non-Plan".[9]

Norman is developing two small-scale urban farming parks in the Hague, the Netherlands, that test and question the limitations and potentialities of permaculture as a possible city-wide alternative design strategy for urban centres [10][11] He is also the lead artist for the city of Cambridge’s project to redevelop part of Trumpington, an area on the city’s southern fringe - developing play elements, street furniture, an allotment and community garden and wayfinding. He is a Professor at the Royal Danish Academy of Art and Design, Copenhagen, Denmark, where he leads the School of Walls and Space.[12]

References

  1. Walls and Sapce
  2. Urbis September 2007
  3. City Projects, "Press Release: Nils Norman: THE HOMERTON PLAYSCAPE MULTIPLE STRUGGLE NICHE," May 2005 (accessed via Projects—Nils Norman—About)
  4. Tate Modern, Global Cities
  5. Stephanie Smith, Beyond Green: toward a sustainable art (Chicago: Smart Museum, 2006), p. 1932
  6. Jennifer Allen, "Utopia Now: the art of Nils Norman," Artforum, January 2002.
  7. Mute Magazine including the covers of issue - The Creative City in Ruins and - It's Not Easy Being Green
  8. Street Work
  9. http://archinect.com/features/article/64621/nils-norman-undercover
  10. http://www.eetbaar-park.nl/index.php/eetbaar-park
  11. http://www.dismalgarden.com/sites/default/files/demos-art_after_nature.pdf
  12. School of Walls and Space
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