Bio
Bio
Joan Nyman holds degrees from Wellesley College and Columbia University and has been on the Faculty of the DeCordova Museum School. Her drawings, " Lessons of the Holocaust---The Jewish World of Eastern Europe " have been exhibited in numerous galleries, museums, as well as public and commercial venues.
She has also taken her work into schools, colleges and educational institutions to teach about tolerance. She is the recipient of several grants, including the Massachusetts Cultural Council and the Enterprise Bank and Trust.
Articles about her work have appeared in numerous publications including The Boston Globe,The Jewish Advocate, The Andovers-North of Boston Living, The Lowell Sun,The Lawrence Eagle Tribune, Metrowest News , Artist Medium On-Line as well as Combined Jewish Philanthropies and JewishBoston.com.
Prior to being an artist, she headed Joan Nyman Associates, a business consulting and training company, where she designed and presented customized training programs in areas that included diversity, respecting differences, communication and conflict management skills, for a wide variety of corporations, professional groups, educational institutions, and governmental agencies.
Background of the Drawings
Being an artist has been a very unexpected journey--one where my work seems to have a life of its own and I am just along for the ride.
Twenty five years ago, I was running my own business consulting and training company. I had absolutely no art training and had no idea that I could draw. After reading a book which mentioned an interesting drawing technique, I picked up a photograph of my late grandfather and started drawing. A few hours later, I looked down at an exact likeness of him and was stunned.
Shortly thereafter, I saw books of photographs of the Jewish towns and villages of Eastern Europe that existed before The Holocaust. I was mesmerized by those faces and knew immediately I had to draw them. Only later did I realize that my grandfather had come from a similar village in Lithuania.
My subsequent work, inspired by those and other photographs, reflects a sense of Jewish life found in the towns and villages of Eastern Europe. I was deeply moved by their soulfulness and have tried to capture their essence.
These towns and villages included some of the poorest and most religious of the Jewish communities, some of which date back hundreds of years.
It is my hope that my drawings provide a visceral connection with a people and their way of life that has long since disappeared and, in some small way, contribute to honoring the memory of the six million Jews who were killed in the Holocaust.
Their faces are a poignant reminder of the importance of respecting different religions and cultures and combating prejudice wherever it exists..
The lessons of the Holocaust are an integral part of our common history and remind us to stay vigilant and speak out against any injustice we may see.
"ALL THAT IS NECESSARY FOR THE TRIUMPH OF EVIL IS FOR GOOD MEN TO DO NOTHING" Edmund Burke