The Menil Collection Opens The Iconic Portrait Strand by Nestor Topchy on August 4

Houston institution to host the first museum presentation of the artist’s portrait series

The Menil Collection is pleased to host The Iconic Portrait Strand by Nestor Topchy—the first museum exhibition of Houston-based artist Nestor Topchy’s (b.1963) contemporary portraits—will be on view at the Menil from August 4, 2023–January 21, 2024.

The show will include a selection of some one hundred paintings using techniques and materials associated with religious icons for more than 800 years. He considers these contemporary portraits as a single and ongoing work of art, a corpus, that for Topchy, not only depicts his circle of friends and colleagues, but also represents and honors his community.

Topchy’s work has connections to the Menil’s important holdings of religious icons that span fourteen centuries and include significant examples of devotional objects from the Byzantine Empire and Christian Orthodox traditions.

Topchy’s luminescent contemporary versions share a complex array of layered materials (red clay, hot hide glue, powdered marble, gold leaf, pure earth pigments, and egg yolk) on small wooden panels, and are finished with precise brushwork, called “ozhivki”, or life-giving lines. What distinguishes The Iconic Portrait Strand from historical precedent is that the artist does not depict holy figures or events, but everyday subjects. Through this reverential painting technique, Topchy presents his sitters in a sacred context, connecting the past to the present, the sacred to the profane. “To paint a mortal in the sea of gold light, alone,” Topchy states, “is to propose a saintliness that dwells within all people.”

Michelle White, Senior Curator, The Menil Collection, said, “The Menil is proud to present The Iconic Portrait Strand by Nestor Topchy. Nestor has been a friend and collaborator of the Menil for many years and given our collection and conservation commitment to the care and study of Byzantine-era art, objects, and material processes, it is an ideal place to showcase his reimagination of the art form. In these iconic portraits, the artist astutely balances his deeply traditional and spiritual approach with familiar subjects. The startling result not only elevates the subject but poses fascinating questions about the relevancy of the divine within contemporary art practices and what it means to capture likeness in a moment flooded with images.”   

Describing this work, Nestor Topchy explains, “I began this project as a way of exploring what was innate to myself as an artist. It was a way of bringing together resonant images from my childhood. I grew up in the Orthodox Church and was fascinated early on with the symbolic patterns of Ukrainian pysanka egg designs. I also enjoy working within the restraints of the craft of icon painting. The controlled and formal language allows many possibilities to emerge, especially through the meaningful connections that take place through my process. I make the sketches for the paintings by drawing each sitter in person, so the work also becomes about that interaction, connecting the temporal, ephemeral moment with history and tradition, a gesture towards the immutable, the divine.”

Related Programs: Menil programs are free and open to everyone. Learn more at menil.org/events.

Exhibition Reception: Thursday, August 3, 6 p.m.

Curator Talk: Sophie Asakura: Sunday, August 13, 3 p.m.

Artist Talk: Nestor Topchy: Thursday, October 12, 7 p.m.

About Nestor Topchy

An American-Ukrainian artist, Nestor Topchy was born and raised in New Jersey. He received his bachelor’s degree from the Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore and his Master of Fine Arts degree from the University of Houston. Deeply influenced by Ukrainian folk art, Zen philosophy, the Dada art movement, and the work of Yves Klein, he is known for his use of diverse media and attention to craft. Topchy has worked in Houston for over thirty years and is the founder of HIVE (Habitable Interdisciplinary Visionary Environment).

Photos courtesy of The Menil