Inside Artspace: Nathan Naetzker


Not so now. "I feel like I died and went to heaven," Naetzker says of his new apartment in Artspace, the year-old, Midtown Buffalo artist's residence that consists of 36 units in the Breitweiser Building at 1219 Main Street, as well as 24 new builds behind it. With nearly 30 projects either completed or underway nationally, Artspace has become America's leading nonprofit real estate developer for the arts.
Naetzker, who paints in a variety of styles from abstract to realist, said that when he first saw Artspace he was awestruck and didn't feel worthy. "It's crazy how nice it is. It's like a five-star resort compared to places I've lived in and seen. I don't have to make do at Artspace. It's clean, new and inspiring to live in a community of artists. It's vital," Naetzker said.
"Suffering for your art is an urban legend," Naetzker said. "There is a theory of art that states that if you want to make art that's beautiful and graceful you should live in those surroundings. If architecture can shape people's lives, Artspace can make the life of an artist easier."
As for the concept of a group of artists living and working together, an experience that may not persist after an artist is trained in a college setting, Naetzker stated, "As a painter, I spend a lot of time alone. Painting is a solitary task, and I need privacy to do my work. It's nice to walk outside my door and find someone doing similar work. Behind each door there's someone else doing the same type of work. It's comforting. And when we want to we can come together as a community of like-minded people—part of a collaborative. We're not so isolated."

Artspace residents will display a collective exhibit, in which works will be on view until June 14. Naetzker, who just sold a portrait (see his work here) to a woman in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, is participating in the exhibit along with his fellow residents. He has begun a series of iceberg paintings, one of which recently sold "off the wall".

"This is such a positive thing for downtown," Naetzker said, adding that he'd never heard of the national Artspace project before he had the opportunity to apply for space in the Buffalo location.
The Rottweiler Naetzker keeps is a companion, in contrast to its predecessor, a fighting dog he picked up on the streets of Brooklyn as a bodyguard. Not feeling the least bit of threat in his new neighborhood, Naetzker marvels that his basic needs are within walking distance of his loft. "A city is only as good as its people, and Buffalo is the best city on earth," he said.
As for his loft, "I have a one-year lease. I'm never leaving."

For Amy Taravella, this weekend means her solo in what took two years to accomplish. The artist has been working in an intensive two-week creation session with three other artists in four different cities in two different countries. Together, they have scrapped together funds to combine their talents and create a unique production based on the four humours.
The four humours was a theory of the makeup and workings of the human body that began with Greek and Roman philosophers. The …
Alt Theatre now has some company in the Great Arrow Building at 255 Elmwood Avenue – The Manny Fried Playhouse. The Subversive Theatre Collective has been bounced from venue to venue to produce plays and our proud to present this newly opened theatre as their permanent home. They will be celebrating with a Theatre Warming party on Friday, September 5th.
The Playhouse will be named after Manny Fried, the man in the photograph with this post. Fried is a Buffalo native who since t …
In the March issue of BR, an image was used for the article of the Buffalo Club that led to the introduction to Dr. V. Roger Lalli, and his photo-realistic watercolors of Buffalo.
At 86 years of age, Dr. Lalli is a dynamic and passionate supporter of Buffalo as both the great city it once was, and the new one he sees dawning. He seems particularly well situated to tell his Buffalo story through his artwork, his role as an educator, historian and impassioned supporter of the cit …
Image: Antelope Headpiece with Basketry Cap, 18th Century
(Bambara, Malli, Tji'Wara Society)
Wood, plant, fiber -
Collection Buffalo Museum of Science
The latest exhibit at the Albright-Knox will be one that takes viewers on a journey across the globe. It’s called “From Tusk to Tail: Animals and Art” and explores how different artists across the world have represented different animals. This is the second exhibit at the Knox that has been organized in partnership w … 



Comment Options
EmpireOfLight
Nice work, kind of reminds me of Alex Katz. Nice job artspace. Dollars from Florida are now in Buffalo; what more can you ask?
Report this
RaChaCha
Saw Nathan's work at the ArtSpace opening earlier this month an liked it! One of the main ideas behind ArtSpace nationwide is to create places where artists (especially up-and-coming) don't have to feel like second class citizens, and Nathan's backstory suggests it's having exactly that effect in Buffalo.
Report this