Richard Alan Nichols
Gallery owner brushes up his
painting skills to produce Tradiciones' covers
By Scott Sloan, For The
Taos News
In the well-spaced,
well-appointed Nichols' Taos Fine Art Gallery, the works of
artists are arranged
carefully so that many can be displayed at once without a
feeling of clutter. Each painting
or photograph or sculpture is given room to draw the eye of
the viewer.
Sitting with gallery owner
Richard Alan "Rich" Nichols at a table in the middle of the
gallery, the works of
Julian Robles, Don Ward, Dee Wescott and Louis Tedesco show
the range of artistic
styles and tastes and the careful attention to placing each
individual work.
"It's hard enough to sell
a painting, so you want to present [the work] in the best
possible light. Here, we
can show pieces off the way they should be shown," Rich
said.
Whether he is talking to a
visitor, or dealing with an important client or conferring
with his gallery
director, Larry Eagan, Rich brings an energy and enthusiasm
to his job that is infectious.
Those traits were present
from his days as a student at the Art Institute of Chicago,
then as a freelance
commercial artist. For a few years, Rich plugged his energy
into a high-stress,
rigid atmosphere, where clients were never quite satisfied
and artistic fulfillment
was, by necessity, put on hold. Even now, talking about
those chaotic days makes
him wince.
"A rough racket isn't the
word for it," he said.
After such a difficult
experience, Rich decided to pursue his first love as an
artist. His work is
steeped in the tradition of American Impressionism. At
school, he studied under the
master painter, Irving Shapiro, who introduced Rich to the
works of Nicolai Fechin, the Russian born artist who settled in Taos earlier
this century. Rich's first trip from Chicago to Taos was a revelation.
"I came here to visit and
I felt like I was home," is how he describes that visit.
Looking at the terrain
with an artist's eye, Rich saw firsthand how the natural
lighting and the
mountainous terrain fit with his own style. Finally in 1994,
he packed up with his family and moved to Taos for good.
He admits that the
transition with his artwork was initially a struggle. After
having painted in
Chicago and the Midwest for so long, with its flat
landscapes, geometric urban shapes and a darker sky, the New Mexico landscape of
his dreams presented him with a real challenge to adapt.
"I had to change my whole
palette. But I also had to change my whole way of thinking.
It's a different way of
thinking here," Rich said. "But this is a place that feeds
your soul. I realized in
Chicago I was always pushing, but out here the culture
recognizes you have to be
able to control that."
When Rich discovered that
the rhythms of life here were as important as the terrain,
he began to succeed with
his art. And that success captured the attention of The Taos
News when Publisher
Chris Baker was looking for an artist to paint the covers
for the first-ever edition
of "Tradiciones."
As his vision grew, his
gallery business was growing as well. He opened his first
gallery, a 500-square-foot
space on Bent Street, in 1998. When the gallery began
attracting other artists,
it brought Rich a sense of his own niche in the Taos arts
community.
"It evolved slowly there. I
learned pretty quickly to have people involved who shared
the same mind set," he
said. At this point, he hooked up with Eagan, who still
serves as his gallery
director, which freed up more of Rich's time for painting.
He was also coming to grips
with the shortcomings of his space on Bent Street.
"It was a great place with
great energy, but it wasn't getting any foot traffic."
So with customary energy,
Rich began exhibiting his works and the works of other
artists in restaurants
in town, which brought more exposure to the works and to the
gallery.
Even though growth made a
new space necessary, the decision to buy the former Taos Gallery almost didn't come to pass.
"I never pursued it. I
looked at it with a lot of trepidation," he said.
Rich gives all the credit
for pushing him in the direction of the gallery to Eagan. It
took a year of
negotiations before Rich decided to take the plunge. "I
walked in here and I looked at the space and I started seeing all the
potential," he said.
Rich is now settled in and
happy, calling the newly named Nichols' Taos Fine Art
Gallery, "the best space
in town," and making plans for the future. He's taking the
works of his regular
artists on the road to Pampa, Texas, right outside of
Amarillo. Nichols sees it as upholding the tradition of the original Taos
Art Colony, which would regularly show its works in other cities.
"One hundred years ago,
the art colony here was carrying that tradition on," he said.