2 分鐘

My Memory of Niki - Marcelo Zitelli Missouri Botanical Garden - Niki 2008

    • 政府

On Guide: n6 Sculpture: Bird Head Totem Location: Gladney Rose Garden
My name is Marcelo Zitelli, I worked with Niki the last 16 years of her life and now I am a trustee of the Niki Charitable Art Foundation.

I met Niki in 1987 and I found a very open and charming person. Even if I was shy she talked to my like an equal, someone who was able to work directly with her. Right away we have a very good relationship and our relationship was based in our love of theatre. She wanted to be an actress when she was very young and I too was in theatre and Nikis work is always about telling a story.

When I met her she was very upset about one sculpture that she wanted to do but the studio that she normally work with was unavailable. I told her I was willing to try and Niki say ok, you have a month to do the sculpture and I finished in 10 days, so Niki said to quit working on my other project.

When began working together in the studio Niki needed to change the way she worked, which was to create a small model then send to a studio to be enlarged. Instead of sending the works someplace else, we built medium and large sized sculptures together in the studio.

Niki was always concerned about the people who needed more attention in society like women, Native Americans and African Americans, that why in her work, she was always trying to bring justice to those who were not recognized by the powerful member of the society.

We see this in her work with the Black Heroes. This body of her work was born from an article in the New York Times that downplayed the importance of black jazz musicians. Niki was angry about that. Thats how Louis Armstrong and Miles Davis came to be represented in her art.

On Guide: n6 Sculpture: Bird Head Totem Location: Gladney Rose Garden
My name is Marcelo Zitelli, I worked with Niki the last 16 years of her life and now I am a trustee of the Niki Charitable Art Foundation.

I met Niki in 1987 and I found a very open and charming person. Even if I was shy she talked to my like an equal, someone who was able to work directly with her. Right away we have a very good relationship and our relationship was based in our love of theatre. She wanted to be an actress when she was very young and I too was in theatre and Nikis work is always about telling a story.

When I met her she was very upset about one sculpture that she wanted to do but the studio that she normally work with was unavailable. I told her I was willing to try and Niki say ok, you have a month to do the sculpture and I finished in 10 days, so Niki said to quit working on my other project.

When began working together in the studio Niki needed to change the way she worked, which was to create a small model then send to a studio to be enlarged. Instead of sending the works someplace else, we built medium and large sized sculptures together in the studio.

Niki was always concerned about the people who needed more attention in society like women, Native Americans and African Americans, that why in her work, she was always trying to bring justice to those who were not recognized by the powerful member of the society.

We see this in her work with the Black Heroes. This body of her work was born from an article in the New York Times that downplayed the importance of black jazz musicians. Niki was angry about that. Thats how Louis Armstrong and Miles Davis came to be represented in her art.

2 分鐘

關於政府的熱門 Podcast

Pekingology
Center for Strategic and International Studies
The Real Story
BBC World Service
The Truth of the Matter
CSIS | Center for Strategic and International Studies
Big Take DC
Bloomberg and iHeartPodcasts
The Law Show
BBC Radio 4
Analysis
BBC Radio 4