Tender Burden


Nicole Duennebier, Tent Worm Bouquet, acrylic on panel

On view May 20 - July 14, 2023

Sat 5/20, 4-6 pm: Opening Reception
Sat 6/24, 4-6 pm: Old Joy - a conversation with Nicole Duennebier
Sat 7/8, 4-6 pm: Show and Tell - a painting demonstration with Erin MacEachern

13FOREST Gallery is pleased to present Tender Burden, Nicole Duennebier’s fourth solo exhibition with the gallery.

Nicole Duennebier has not gotten over flowers. Since her captivating 2021 solo show Floral Hex, Duennebier’s paintings have been consumed by increasingly ostentatious floral displays. While flowers were a new subject matter for Duennebier in Floral Hex, and one she was initially reluctant to pursue, with Tender Burden she has achieved a confident command of her floral subjects. 

In this exhibition Duennebier revisits the theme of memorial flowers and the trinkets we leave behind to commemorate other people’s lives. While the specific significance of these memorials can be lost to an outside observer, the emotion compelling their creation is palpable. For Tender Burden Duennebier creates memorials that overflow with meaning that is just out of reach. Heavy wreaths and lush blossoms are densely piled on provisional altars; woven throughout enticing bouquets are Duennebier’s signature elements of surprise: dead frogs, snails, and writhing masses of tent worms. Fascinated by graveside mementos, Duennebier includes her version of them in the form of small totems that contribute mystery and a slight threat of violence. Like her more repulsive inclusions, these statues build a mood within the paintings that create dissonance with the loveliness of the blooms. Like the plucked flowers she paints, hovering between life and death, Duennebier’s work manifests dualities: beauty and disgust, clarity and obscurity. 

For three of the paintings in Tender Burden, Duennebier made the unusual choice of repurposing some of her previous work. Reflecting on these earlier paintings, Duennebier could see her old preoccupations: a focus on technical skill and recreating images from photographs or models rather than trusting her own interpretive vision. Though she no longer believes that these compositions worked as a whole, she could still appreciate the techniques that her younger self was striving to perfect. In an act of creative destruction, Duennebier preserved her favorite components from the past and painted over the rest.

These repurposed paintings serve as a self-contained retrospective that brings a body of Duennebier’s more rigidly accurate earlier work into direct conversation with her assured and expansive floral work of today. As their own type of memorial, shards of the older paintings intrude on the floral scenes of Tender Burden as strange shapes that disrupt compositional logic and act as windows to the artist’s younger self. Though revisiting older paintings might invoke nostalgia, Duennebier’s shrewd excisions prevent treacly sentimentality about her own work. Far from a staid memory of the past, these reworked paintings are an evolving testament to Duennebier’s progress as an artist.


 

Preview Tender Burden

 

 

About the Artist

Nicole Duennebier was born in Hartford, Connecticut in 1983. She received her Bachelor of Fine Arts at Maine College of Art with a major in painting. Her BFA thesis work was most influenced by research into the coastal ecosystems of Maine. In 2006 she was awarded the Monhegan Island Artists Residency. On the island she continued her work with sea life, and perceived a natural connection between the darkness and intricacy of undersea regions and the aesthetic of 16th-century Dutch still-life painting.

In 2008 Duennebier moved to the Boston area, and now lives and works in Malden. She is a 2022 and 2016 Massachusetts Cultural Council Painting Fellow and her work can be found in the permanent collection of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston and the New Britain Museum of American Art. Writing about Bright Beast, her 2013 solo show at the Lilypad in Cambridge, Cate McQuaid of the Boston Globe said Duennebier’s “technical mastery gives the artist what she needs to seduce the viewer; the content lowers the boom.”  Duennebier has also been featured in Art New England, Hi-Fructose Magazine and the Portland Press Herald, among other publications.

Duennebier has worked alongside her sister Caitlin Duennebier for a number of collaborative exhibitions, most recently Love Superior, A Death Supreme at Simmons University. In 2018, she was featured in a solo exhibition, Pushing Painting, at the David Winton Bell Gallery at Brown University. Her first solo show at 13FOREST, The Great Season, ran from January through March 2014. An interview with the artist from that time by gallery co-owner Jim Kiely can be found here. Duennebier's second solo show at 13FOREST, View into the Fertile Country, ran from May through July 2018.  Read what gallery director Caitee Hoglund wrote about the concurrent exhibitions at 13FOREST Gallery and Brown University here. Duennebier’s third solo show Floral Hex was on display at the gallery in early 2021.