Nate’s earliest memories of working with wood are of building skate ramps in his father’s garage - cutting stolen 2x4s with a miter saw in his bare feet on hot summer days. After a brief stint in advertising and branding, Nate returned to woodworking by adapting his visual sensibilities to the woodcut printmaking method. He developed his own non-traditional method of creating blocks by using scroll saws, table saws, and drill presses rather than traditional hand gauges. As a result, his blocks are created as puzzle pieces which are often recut and rearranged to live on as new editions and sculptural reliefs. While his work in printmaking may suggest a rudimentary, simplified graphic language, the complexity of his constructions represent both his talents as a craftsman and his understanding of how to convey emotion through color, material and composition. Nate’s work is often influenced by process, material exploration, observations of shape and color, repetition, and personal narrative.
This piece employs a improvisational process in which two stacked painted panels are cut simultaneously. The pieces are then exchanged with one another creating an opposite mirroring affect. The piece has a slight relief aspect due to thin strips of walnut laminated between pieces. The back of the piece reveals this process and often creates an entirely different work.
- Subject Matter: Abstract, Geometric
- Collections: Paintings