Finding Your Happy Place on Nantucket with Painter Nealy Hauschildt
Brooklyn-based artist Nealy Hauschildt joins us on the Classical Post Podcast to discuss her love of Nantucket, capturing gorgeous scenes in her paintings, and searching for inspiration in the fog. Listen to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and wherever else you listen. We also have a special video version on YouTube. Remember to subscribe on these platforms for notifications of new episodes when they drop!
here are some of the things discussed on this episode of the classical post podcast.
Style icons: Miles Redd (for his use of color), Mark Sikes (for his traditional interiors mixed with antiques and floral prints), and McGrath 2.
Recommended online store: Coco Shop
Recommended product: Supergoop (sunscreen)
Dream day: All-day beach day, picnic, lots of friends and family, bonfire, and stay for the whole day!
Happy place: Nantucket
What does success mean to Nealy? Following your gut. As long as you're happy doing what you're doing.
Her artistry: Painting is tied to nature, color, psychology, and how these make you feel.
Where to find her art: The Collective in Dallas, Texas. Her art is coming soon to a studio in New York.
Learn more: nealyhstudio.com
Instagram: @nealy.hauschildt
Born and raised outside of Boston, MA, Nealy Hauschildt received her Bachelor of Fine Arts from the University of Michigan. She currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. Her work has been selected for publications such as CandyFloss Magazine, and is part of private art collections across the country. Nealy’s work explores our personal relationship with nature through color, line, and form. Employing a range of mediums, her style is highly expressive. Using luminous watercolor washes and gestural pastels, she aims to capture the shifting light, colors, and shapes of our environment. As planned as it is exploratory, Nealy’s process begins with intentional compositions, leaving room for the natural tendency of the medium to evolve on page. Nealy hopes for her work to provide a moment of reflection, a moment of escape; to reconnect us with land, sea, and sky and the feelings we experience when surrounded by nature.