Leonardo Nierman

(Mexico City, 1932)

Author's artworks

20th-21st Century Mexican

Born in Mexico to a Lithuanian father and a Ukrainian mother, Nierman initially wanted to be a violinist, although he gave up once he realized that he would never be truly great. After graduating with a degree in Physics and Mathematics, he studied the psychology of colour and the shapes of static and moving bodies.

His development as an artist embraced painting and sculpture, applying his knowledge of music, physics and mathematics to those two fields. He created his first works in the 1950s, influenced by abstraction,
and the various branches of Surrealism. His practice was shaped by his interpretation of nature and his search for the relationship between abstract art and the cosmos.

His commercial success in the 1970s and 1980s among well-off social classes earned him certain criticism and rejection. However, the truth is that Leonardo Nierman persevered in an absolutely personal vision of
strongly differentiated from that of any other painter. What might be called an “exalted” abstraction, because Nierman used it to invite us to witness the original magma of creation in fusion, to be part of a blinding big bang or to submerge ourselves in the interior of lightning. A lifetime member of the Royal Society of Arts, London, since 1965 he has garnered many distinctions in Mexico, Italy, France and United States.