Artist
Nathalie Basoski
Nathalie is a Dutch Macedonian photographer and mixed media artist based in Brooklyn, NY. Her current work spans a range of mediums, including photography, video, and mixed media. Drawing on techniques from quilt-making in material-guided improvisations, she creates a visual narrative rooted in her photography and explores the dynamic interplay between disparate worlds.
Since earning a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Pratt Institute in New York in 2018, her work has been shown in group shows at The Contemporary Art Museum in Skopje, North Macedonia, The Susquehanna Art Museum in Harrisburg, PA, as well as in numerous galleries in New York City such as Gallery MC, Amos Eno Gallery, BWAC, and Eyes on Art.
"Using materials like linen, curtains, and clothing, I create visual narratives of intimate landscapes and domestic settings, capturing the traces of human presence and absence. Drawing from the tradition of female quilt-makers, I transform the mundane into fantastical yet deeply human works. By tightly cropping and reconfiguring these images, I explore the selective nature of memory, inviting the viewer to confront the tension between wholeness and fragmentation." - Nathalie Basoski
AVAILABLE ARTWORKS
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The Open Call Winners Collection 2024
"The "Fragmented Memory" series reflects my experience as a Dutch-Macedonian photographer and visual artist exploring themes of foreignness, displacement, and fragmented recollection. Inspired by my immigrant identity and the fleeting nature of familiarity, these works blend photography, video stills, and textiles to evoke the haziness of memory. Using materials like linen, curtains, and clothing, I create visual narratives of intimate landscapes and domestic settings, capturing the traces of human presence and absence. Drawing from the tradition of female quilt-makers, I transform the mundane into fantastical yet deeply human works. By tightly cropping and reconfiguring these images, I explore the selective nature of memory, inviting the viewer to confront the tension between wholeness and fragmentation." - Nathalie Basoski, Fragmented Memory