Collection: NIAD Annex Exhibition // Works by Nathan Lam

On view August 5 through 26

Friday August 12, 1pm // Virtual Artist Talk and Curator Walkthrough

Saturday August 13, 1 to 4pm // Gallery Reception

  

About the exhibition

This exhibition features works created over the past nine years by NIAD artist Nathan Lam. A survey of the artist's practice, this collection includes works on paper that predate his time in the NIAD Studio. From charcoal still life drawings, to comic style illustrations branded with his signature "Lamic", and generously applied acrylic paintings of mountains inspired by a summer trip to Alaska. We offer a look into the different ways Nathan Lam works. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

an exhibition flyer in pencil: a black stripe in the middle with yellow letters "N" and "L", and a yellow cartoon figure. Yellow stripes above and below. The figure casts a black shadow on the yellow stripe below. The exhibition dates and artist's name is in the bottom left corner.

About the artist

I am a Chinese American writer and visual artist. I am Autistic. I don’t think my Autism is important in my practice yet, but I have thought about how to explore it more. I have nothing to hide. I may want to bring it up one day but I don’t speak for other people. I only speak for myself and my own life experience. 

My drawings bounce between realism and comics. Some of my writing is about humor. Some of my art is sarcastic or cynical. I sometimes use censorship as a form of comedy. I like adult or dark humor, such as the Pearls Before Swine comics. I feel that some of my art is too profane or dark to share at NIAD, so that art remains private to me. 

One of my major influences is the Chinese comic series Old Master Q. As a homage to Old Master Q, I include numbers in the top right of my cartoons. When I was younger Garfield was an inspiration to me; currently New Yorker cartoons and Silent Era film comedies are more often sources of interest. Some of my art is influenced by The Simpsons but that might be a mere coincidence.

Pencils are my primary material and painting is secondary in my practice. I like to use oil paints, watercolors, inks and pencils. Saturday art classes at Artworks in San Francisco got me hooked on oil painting when I was a teen.

I am interested in vintage ads and comics, which I look up on the internet as a resource. I like looking at things through a historical lens. Some social norms are the same and some are different. Sometimes I like to mock social norms that don’t age well.

The panels and shapes of my comics are important to me. Sometimes I’ve made circular or squiggly lined panels. I’ve eliminated comic speech bubbles because it makes things too convoluted on the page. I don’t usually show comic ‘action lines’ because I don’t like it in my visual language. I feel like ‘action lines’ waste space in a drawing’s composition. I’m interested in print making in regards to comic strips.

Some of the titles of my comics are not descriptive and some carry over from the comic strip’s story. Something that’s obvious but not too obvious so it doesn’t give away the whole story. Many of my stories and poems are just made up as I go along. I rarely have a whole story beforehand. I tend to write a story over a week, but they are more like extended jokes built up over time. 

I am working on improving my creative writing skills. I also write essays and poetry. My poetry is my hobby and for close friends. I recently made a zine with jokes about emotions. Sometimes my zines come from me watching crazy things on the internet. I am currently interested in developing a short book for NIAD about the exploits of my neighborhood cat.