Work samples

  • Fall Nicole Worksample 1.jpeg
    Fall Nicole Worksample 1.jpeg
    Pangea, cast bronze, patina, unique cast, 2016
  • Starfighter 2022.jpg
    Starfighter 2022.jpg
    Starfighter , 2022 Sculpture 3.5 ft tall x 6 ft wide x 2 ft deep, ceramic, welded steel and acrylic This is a ball with starfish- like or octopus - like arms all around it . one of its arms has jettisoned from its body . Thin steel loops are like blood vessels still attached to the arm and the body.
    Available for Purchase
  • Fall Nicole Worksample 5.jpg
    Fall Nicole Worksample 5.jpg
    Pro-aesthetics, clay; stoneware and porcelain, welded steel, glaze, oil paint, 36 in x 20 in x 12 in, 2005
  • Fall Nicole Worksample 6.jpeg
    Fall Nicole Worksample 6.jpeg
    Tree of Life, welded steel, enamel, clay; stoneware, glaze, 25 ft x 6 ft x 5 ft, 2000

About Nicole

Baltimore County
Nicole Fall is an artist educator who makes three dimensional objects in clay, welded steel and cast bronze.  She has also taught art in a diversity of settings for most of the past 30 years : senior citizens in senior centers,  as a founding teacher of George Washington Carver Center for Arts and Technology, as Associate Professor at Baltimore City Community College, Baltimore City Public Schools, and as an adjunct professor at MICA, and Loyola University and as a visiting artist at Kyambogo… more

Sculpture

This is a portfolio of sculpture in clay, welded steel and cast bronze dating from 1989 to the present. I was born and raised in Washington DC where I was fortunate enough to experience the excitement and turmoil of the 1960s. My mother is an artist and my French father was a journalist during the VietnamWar (where he died in 1967 after stepping on a landmine). I lived in or traveled to other countries as a child, based often on my father's work; Campuchea ( Cambodia), Algeria after its war for independence from the French. My father was also a professor at the historically Black, Howard University.

 My father's sister, my aunt, told stories of  the horrors of the Holocaust (my grandmother and other family members died in concentration camps). She and my father participated in  resistance activities; my young-teen age aunt hiding in a convent, teaching Jewish children new identities so they could go live/hide with Christian families, my father and grandfather joining the French Resistance (my grandfather was tortured to death by Nazis). I would go with my father to the hospital to visit a friend of his who had driven over a landmine in Vietnam, coming eye- to- eye with the results of violence and war. 

From all of these experiences I developed a world view and while I lived a priviledged life, I had some understanding of trauma. This understanding has influenced my teaching and my art work. 
 I was raised to question authority and the assumptions of a White-dominant culture. My art teaching career has been focused on equity, and the empowerment of students through the enhancement of critical thinking skills.

 My sculptural work uses the forms, color, and, at times, the merciless forces of Nature to consider the human condition- along with a dark, absurdist sense of  humor. I am sensitive to the characteristics of each of the media I work with. The physicality of the work ( I studied dance as a youth)  in clay and steel  where I work with the medium and also incorporate what that medium does naturally. The process is more significant to me than the final result. My sense of  success about the work is based on how much I have learned from the process of making it.

 

 

 

 

  • Starfighter, 2022
    Starfighter, 2022
    Starfighter , 2022 Sculpture 3.5 ft tall x 6 ft wide x 2 ft deep, ceramic, welded steel and acrylic This is a ball with starfish- like or octopus - like arms all around it . one of its arms has jettisoned from its body . Thin steel loops are like blood vessels still attached to the arm and the body. The work is in shades of teal, blues and greens with highlights in hot pink and gold.
  • Negotiation
    Negotiation
    Negotiation, cast bronze from brambles pulled from a large pipe, patina, 2 ft x 15 in x 12 in, 2016
  • Cocoon
    Cocoon
    Cocoon, welded steel, porcelain, enamel, oxides, glaze, 4 ft x 3 ft x 1.5 ft, 2004
  • Moving Onwards from Before
    Moving Onwards from Before
    Moving Onwards from Before, 2010, 14 ft x 12 ft x 6 ft, welded steel and clay
  • Crystalizations
    Crystalizations
    Crystalizations, cast bronze from original wax, oil paint, 2000
  • Porcelain and Iron
    Porcelain and Iron
    Porcelain and Iron, Porcelain, iron, steel, oxides and oxidation, 14in x 10in x 7", 2007
  • Fingerpede
    Fingerpede
    Fingerpede, cast bronze from wax original, patina, 5 in x 10 in x 4 in , 2000
  • Tree of Life
    Tree of Life
    Tree of Life, welded steel, stoneware clay, glaze and enamel, 25 ft x 6 ft x 8 ft, 1997
  • Tree of Life ( detail)
    Tree of Life ( detail)
    Tree of Life, Detail, welded steel with clay stoneware, glaze and enamel.
  • I am
    I am
    I am, cast bronze, acrylic, 2.5 ft x 15 in x 12 in, 1995

Public Art (community based) and Social Practice

Community - based public art in this context is sculpture that either/and /or; involves working with community to visualize and make a work for that community and  public space, or a work that is commissioned for a an organization or community center. The completed work occupies a public space.  

Social Practice is art that involves working with people directly as an art form in itself. This leads to discoveries for both the participants and the artist. My first jobs ( I had many part time jobs including cooking in a restaurant) out of college involved working at a children's museum making art with the public and going to senior centers throughout Baltimore teaching ceramics. I also have worked with the public at festivals doing hands-on activities and taught in high schools and colleges.

About 10 years ago I realized that the two aspects of working; by myself in the studio and teaching people should come together somehow. 

  • Katherine Johnson Global Academy Sculpture in-progress, Baltimore, 2023
    Katherine Johnson Global Academy Sculpture in-progress, Baltimore, 2023
    This is a sculpture by Fall Conroy Projects currently in progress. It is 20 ft x 10 ft x 6 ft, Aluminum with a welded steel base. It will be powder coated in the school colors including red-orange, blue and yellow. We worked with the students for 6 classes/ weeks. They made rockets out of cardboard (among other projects) that were recreated in aluminum and incorporated into the sculpture. Silhouettes of the students were then cut out. 4 views of the globe have also been incorporated as well as the moon. This sculpture besides representing "Rocket Pride" commemorates the school's namesake, Katherine Johnson , NASA mathematician, one of the Hidden Figures.
  • Katherine Johnson Global Academy Sculpture (detail)
    Katherine Johnson Global Academy Sculpture (detail)
    This is a detail of a large sculpture. Students originally made these rockets ( the school's mascot) out of cardboard. They were recreated in aluminum to become part of the sculpture. These are approximately 18 inches tall
  • Drawing Outside the Lines, Brooklyn O'Malley Boys and Girls Club, 2022
    Drawing Outside the Lines, Brooklyn O'Malley Boys and Girls Club, 2022
    Window grilles for Brooklyn O'Malley Boys and Girls Club, aluminum, powder-coating, approximately : 45 feet x 5 ft x 3 in A Fall Conroy Project. We worked with the students for 6 classes. We incorporated their drawings into the design of the window grilles. along with silhouettes of the students from photographs. The colors were chosen from the institution's style guide; light yellow , medium blue and a rose pink.
  • Tug of Fun, Brooklyn O'Malley Boys and Girls Club
    Tug of Fun, Brooklyn O'Malley Boys and Girls Club
    Tug of Fun, Brooklyn O'Malley Boys and Girls Club, 2021, Window Grate coverings. Aluminum, approximately 30 ft x 5 ft x 2 in. A project of Fall Conroy Projects. I along with Blake Conroy taught art classes to the students as a way of developing ideas. We took photographs of them and made their silhouettes in aluminum . The color is a baked on powder-coating.
  • Sculpture for Access Art
    Sculpture for Access Art
    Access Art at Morrell Park Elementary Middle School Baltimore, laser cut images and welded steel, powder coated color, 17 ft x 6 ft diameter 2013, students posed for photographs that were then made into a predetermined umbrella shape.
  • Washington Very Special Arts; School for the Arts in Learning
    Washington Very Special Arts; School for the Arts in Learning
    Washington Very Special Arts; School for the Arts in Learning; welded steel figures made from students' drawings, 40 ft x 12 ft by 6 ft, 2008, Washington DC
  • WVSA; School for the Arts in Learning
    WVSA; School for the Arts in Learning
    WVSA;School for the Arts in Learning (detail)
  • Hand of Creativity, Johns Hopkins University
    Hand of Creativity, Johns Hopkins University
    Hand of Creativity, Johns Hopkins University, Welded steel, A temporary, one year installation, where passersby could add objects or materials ( based on Nikisi figures of Central Africa), 9ft x 4.5 ft x 3 ft ,2012
  • Hand of Creativity (detail)
    Hand of Creativity (detail)
    Hand of Creativity (detail) people adding objects and notes to the sculpture
  • Empower
    Empower
    Empower, 2010, I would have the poorly executed sign hanging in the gallery and people would call the number and I would ask them about little everyday acts that they did to empower others and thus themselves too. One man said he didn't do anything but he was the primary caregiver for his sick wife. He was heartened to hear that his work mattered. The intent was to take this outside the gallery. The point was to empower people to see that they empowered others even in small ways.

Printmaking

I have made prints in one form or another since childhood ( I come from a family of artists).  Sometimes they relate to my sculptural sometimes not. As with many sculptors I find negotiating two dimensional space quite challenging. 
  • Eye, Heart
    Eye, Heart
    Eye, Heart, monotype, 18 in x 24 in, 2014
  • Swirling
    Swirling
    Swirling, drypoint and monoprint, 12in x 14in, 2015
  • Swirling ( detail)
    Swirling ( detail)
    Swirling ( detail)
  • Stalctite Lace
    Stalctite Lace
    Stalactite Lace, monotype, 24 in x 36 in, 2014
  • Wrapped Twine, Monprint
    Wrapped Twine, Monprint
    Wrapped Twine, monoprint w/ linoleum print, 24 x 32, 2013
  • Pangea, multiple montypes
    Pangea, multiple montypes
    Pangea, multiple monoprints and monotypes torn or cut up and sewn together, 10 ft x 3 ft 2016
  • 'round Midnight, NOLA 2009
    'round Midnight, NOLA 2009
    'round Midnight, NOLA 2009 , laser jet photos on Vietnamese handmade paper, sewn together with sewing machine, 20 in x 32 in, 2012
  • 'round Midnight, NOLA 2009 (detail)
    'round Midnight, NOLA 2009 (detail)
    'round Midnight, NOLA 2009, laset printed photoson handmade Vietnamese paper, 2012
  • Aftermath and Warning NOLA 2009
    Aftermath and Warning NOLA 2009
    Aftermath and Warning, NOLA 2009, laser prints on Vietnamese handmade paper with found object from the scene, 32 in x 31in, sewn together ( Mark Bradford's Mithra is in the photos) , 2012
  • Quotidien Warrior
    Quotidien Warrior
    Quotidien Warrior, relief print,18 in x 24 in, 1979