BEGINNING AGAIN
(Genstart).
05.09 - 03.10.2025
This was Nadia Ørneborg’s first fine art exhibition as well as her first step back into the world after being hit by a taxi in 2020. It also marks the 5th year anniversary of the accident that changed her life.
Held at Gallery Ørn, Frederiksberg, Denmark.
WORKS EXHIBITED
"Hope Exploding!" 240x190 cm. Acrylic paint, oil paint & oil sticks on canvas. SOLD.
"Resilience" 240x190 cm. Tinted charcoal, acrylic paint, oil paint & oils sticks on canvas. SOLD.
"Courage" 240x190 cm. Tinted charcoal, oil paint & oil sticks on canvas. SOLD.
"Unbreakable Wonder 02" 110x90 cm. Tinted charcoal, acrylic paint, oil paint & oil sticks on canvas. SOLD.
"Unbreakable Wonder" 110x90 cm. Tinted charcoal, acrylic paint, oil paint & oil sticks on canvas. SOLD.
"From One Moment To The Next" 125x80 cm. Tinted charcoal, acrylic paint, oil paint & oil sticks on canvas. SOLD.
GALLERY OPENING NIGHT
ARTIST STATEMENT
When life changes abruptly, how do you keep yourself going in the face of immense loss and unimaginable suffering?
How do you hold on to the hope that something new – and possibly even better can emerge from the broken pieces of what once was?
Welcome to Beginning Again (Genstart).
An exhibition that celebrates coming back to life and the resilience and courage – in all its many forms – needed to overcome crisis and begin again.
Cycling home from a work event 5 years ago, my world was shattered by a taxi driver who ran a red light. My career in animation, my relationship, my brain and my body; everything was lost to the whiplash and severe concussion I sustained that night. 4 years would pass before I received the care I needed to start recovering.
Unable to work digitally, I returned to traditional media. Unable to express my inner world figuratively, I turned to the abstract. I chose large scale – not for spectacle, but out of a deep inner need to use my whole body when creating.
Focusing on my love for colour, texture and movement, the paintings are a dance between surrender and control. Bold shapes and soft lines dominate the images, depicting a determination to create change in a seemingly unchangeable situation.
Through these rich, large-scale compositions I try to process some of the all consuming and chaotic emotions that became my daily reality as I fought to find a way back to myself. They are, each of them, pieced together by the hope, resilience and stubborn insistence I needed to survive.
I want them to stand as a reminder of our innate capacity to overcome even the darkest moments with gratitude and fierce determination.
And perhaps invite the viewer to wonder:
What unexpected beauty might bloom from the pain you’ve suffered?