From gods to puffer jackets: the world of Nina van de Ven
In June, City café Benee welcomed four artworks from Tilburg artist Nina van de Ven. Her sculptures are intriguing, layered, and bring the human and the mythical closer together. But who better than Nina herself can tell what drives her work?
Nina grew up in Tilburg, in a creative household where dancing, drawing, and dressing up were the norm. Her parents, both trained in the arts, gave her the space and trust to follow her artistic curiosity: from her first crafts at home to her education at St. Joost. “My creativity was never seen as nonsense,” she says. “It was just allowed to be.”
This attitude is evident in her work: uncompromising, thoughtful, and full of symbolism. Nina has a distinctive style: figurative graphics (print art), rooted in ancient stories. “I see my work as a kind of collage of everything I read and research,” she says. “Often mythical stories with connections to the contemporary. I collect knowledge (visual and textual) and process it into one image.”
