Nuria Milan: Woodman

But the shadow of that labor is long. In 2003, Nuria Milan Woodman finally released her own first monograph, "The Persistence of Absence" . The book was a critical success but a commercial puzzle. It defied categorization. Was it art photography? Was it architectural study? Or was it a silent dialogue with a dead sister? In one diptych, Nuria places her own photograph of a peeling floral wallpaper alongside a 1977 Francesca self-portrait of a hand emerging from similar wallpaper. The effect is heartbreaking. It suggests that Nuria is searching for Francesca in the walls of the world, finding her in the texture of decay.

Critics have often compared her eye to that of the Spanish master José Ortiz-Echagüe, but where Echagüe romanticized the picturesque , Nuria Milan Woodman documents the psychological . Her most celebrated photograph, "La Ventana de la Abuela" (Grandmother’s Window, 1984), depicts a cracked pane of glass in a Sevilla apartment. Through the fracture, the blurred figure of an old woman sits knitting, her form fragmented by the damage. It is a photograph about the impossibility of fully seeing or knowing the past. The crack is not a flaw; it is the subject. nuria milan woodman

She has never married. She has no children. When asked if she feels lonely, she smiles. "Look at the photograph," she says. "There is always someone in the room. You just can't see them yet." But the shadow of that labor is long

Born in Boulder, Colorado, in the late 1950s to the painter and ceramicist Betty Woodman and the painter and sculptor George Woodman, Nuria Milan Woodman grew up in a household that breathed form. Where Francesca sought to dissolve the body into wallpaper and decay, Nuria sought to capture the moment before the dissolution—the instant when light first kisses a stone wall in a Tuscan farmhouse, or the precise second when a glass vase on a windowsill holds the ghost of a sunset. Her work is one of patience, of negative space, of the sublime geometry found in the mundane. It defied categorization

Today, in her early sixties, Nuria Milan Woodman continues to work. She is currently completing a series titled "Oblivion Protocols" —a study of abandoned sanatoriums along the Ligurian coast. In these images, the absence of life becomes the protagonist. A broken gurney. A stained mattress. A window that looks out onto a sea that doesn't care.