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Nana on a Dolphin

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Year
  
1998 (1998)

Artist
  
Niki de Saint Phalle

Type
  
fiberglass & mosaic

Created
  
1998

Nana on a Dolphin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaen116Nan

Location
  
National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, D.C., United States

Owner
  
Niki Charitable Art Foundation

Similar
  
Les Trois Grâces, Number 23 Basketball Player, Arbre Serpents, Sun God, Fontaine Jean Tinguely

Nana on a Dolphin is a public artwork by French sculptor Niki de Saint Phalle. Nana on a Dolphin is part of the National Museum of Women in the Arts New York Avenue Sculpture Project and has also been on display at the home of Nicole Salinger in Provence, France.

Contents

Description

In the style of de Saint Phalle's work, Nana on a Dolphin depicts one of her signature Nana's standing on the back of a brilliantly colored dolphin. The dolphin is covered in bright colored mosaic tiles with a slight grin to its lip line. Just in front of the dolphins top fin stands Nana, standing with her proper right foot kicked behind her, to balance with one foot. Her faceless head and body is orange and she wears a silver bathing suit with de Saint Phalle's signature heart on the proper left breast and black tile on the proper right. In her proper right hand she holds a red ball and her proper left hand is thrown behind her back. The statue stands on a steel pole which is then bolted into a concrete block.

New York Avenue Sculpture Project

Nana on a Dolphin is one of the many sculptures being installed for the Project by the National Museum of Women in the Arts. By 2015 a selection of sculptures will be installed along New York Avenue from 13th Street to 9th Street, in the heart of Mount Vernon Square. The museums efforts are in part to bring "character" to an area where "there is a lot of good stuff going on," due to revitalization programs in the neighborhood. de Saint Phalle's works, four in total, are the first in a series of installations. The museums installation of de Saint Phalle's iconic pop art works are meant to be contrasting to the traditional sculpture that graces the streets and squares of Washington.

These works will remain up for one year, before being returned to the artists foundation.

Installation

The artwork was installed mid-April 2010, being delivered to its placement location by way of a flat-bed semi-truck in crates. Each piece was removed and placed by way of a crane.

Dedication

Nana on a Dolphin, along with the other de Saint Phalle sculptures in the project, were dedicated at 1:30 p.m. on April 28, 2010., with an evening reception within the museum. Dr. Jill Biden, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Jack Evans, National Museum of Women in the Arts founder Wilhelmina Holladay and de Saint Phalle's granddaughter Bloum Cardenas, along with members of the D.C. BID, District of Columbia Department of Transportation, D.C. Office of the Planning, among others, attended the ribbon cutting.

Conservation

The entire selection of de Saint Phalle's works are removed during the winter for conservation purposes, only to reappear in the Spring.

Gopnik

Washington Post art critic Blake Gopnik stated that the pieces are "less weighty than what we hope to find inside our museums." Glopnik believed the pieces were nothing like the Picasso or van Gogh works that are often expected. "They are probably best enjoyed at a nice downtown clip of 15 or 20 mph."

Gopnik also touches on the idea of the works being from a woman-based museum: "Wouldn't you imagine that when a women's museum makes its most public statement yet, it would avoid any hint of decor or fluff?" Describing de Saint Phalle's works as "scary and aggressive" versus what others often describe as jubilant and goofy. Overall, he describes the works as plop art.

References

Nana on a Dolphin Wikipedia