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Nell Blaine

Gloucester Harbor and other works

March 14 – April 18, 2026

Nell Blaine Gloucester Harbor from Rocky Neck, 1954
Nell Blaine The Harbor from Banner Hill, 1986
Nell Blaine Flowers in the Studio, 1988
Nell Blaine Eudora Room, October, 1982
Nell Blaine First Anemones, 1981
Nell Blaine Anemones, 1977
Nell Blaine November Fifth, 1990
Nell Blaine Ledge and Sea, Early Morning, 1977
Nell Blaine Bright Fall, Dark Clouids, 1981
Nell Blaine Yellow Table with Flowers, 1974
Nell Blaine Orange Burst and Red Star, 1986
Nell Blaine Rooftops, 94th Street, 1967
Nell Blaine Riverside Park, April, 1990
Nell Blaine Winter Sun, Riverside, 1996
Nell Blaine Mt. Sinai Bouquet, 1960
Nell Blaine Elizabeth's Fruit Bowl and Coconut (Saratoga Springs, NY), 1961
Nell Blaine West Wharf Bouquet, 1974
Nell Blaine Howard's Coat, Kitchen, V, 1979
Nell Blaine Anemones II, 1974
Nell Blaine Rock and Trees near Putnam Lake, 1968
Nell Blaine Street Light in Park, 1962
Nell Blaine Wildflowers, 1970
Nell Blaine Howard's Coat, Kitchen, IV, 1979
Nell Blaine
Nell Blaine
Nell Blaine

Press Release

Tibor de Nagy Gallery is pleased to present Nell Blaine: Gloucester Harbor and Other Works, an exhibition of paintings and watercolors. The exhibition focuses on one of Blaine’s most cherished subjects—Gloucester Harbor—captured from various vantage points near her home, alongside her signature floral still lifes and interiors.

Nell Blaine first visited Gloucester in the summer of 1943 at the suggestion of Judith Rothschild. Recalling that period as “magic and productive,” Blaine was so charmed by the maritime life that she eventually purchased a home there. She maintained a dual residence, spending summers and autumns in Gloucester while remaining a fixture of the New York City art world.

The works in this exhibition range from the mid-1950s—when Blaine’s signature style of complex, color-driven painting first emerged—through the 1990s. This survey is particularly notable for spanning the pivotal year of 1959, when Blaine contracted polio during a trip to Greece. After falling gravely ill on the island of Mykonos, she returned to the U.S., where she spent months in an iron lung and years in recovery.

Though the illness left her unable to lift her right arm to an easel, Blaine’s tenacity was absolute. She learned to paint with her left hand from a wheelchair and, following surgery, regained the ability to work in watercolor with her right hand on lateral surfaces. Featured in the exhibition is a poignant watercolor of a bouquet of flowers created in the hospital during her recovery—a testament to a passion for painting that never wavered. Ever "the life of the party," Blaine’s wide circle of friends supported her through this transition, but it was her own vigor that allowed her to continue traveling and painting as prolifically as she had before.

Nell Blaine arrived in New York City in 1942 to study with Hans Hofmann. She gained early acclaim for her hard-edged abstract paintings at the Jane Street Gallery, the city’s first serious artist cooperative. In 1953, she began her long association with Tibor de Nagy Gallery, notably collaborating with Kenneth Koch on one of the gallery’s first poet/artist editions. An influential member of the second-generation New York School, Blaine remains a central figure among the group of representational painters that included Larry Rivers, Jane Freilicher, Louisa Matthiasdottir, Leland Bell, Al Kresch, and Robert De Niro, Sr.

Nell Blaine (1922–1996) has been the subject of over seventy-five museum and gallery exhibitions throughout the United States. Her work was recently featured in the group exhibition (Nothing But) Flowers at Karma, New York, and is held in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, and the Museum of Modern Art. A comprehensive monograph, Nell Blaine: Her Art and Life, was published in 1998 with an essay by the artist’s longtime friend, critic Martica Sawin.