Nanda Sanders

Nanda Sanders

Nanda Sanders' paintings begin with her eyes closed. There is no music—only silence and full attention to what is moving within. A color emerges, followed by an impulse, a direction. Her hands respond instinctively, reaching directly into the paint. There is no brush between her and the paper or canvas—only direct contact. She allows her body to move freely, surrendering to whatever wants to reveal itself.

This is how the first layer takes shape: raw, intuitive, and deeply physical. Sometimes the work comes to a standstill. Then she waits. She listens inwardly until something new begins to emerge. When she opens her eyes, she observes what has appeared. From there, she continues the process—sometimes using her hands, sometimes palette knives or other materials—always responding to what the painting itself asks for. Layer by layer, the image unfolds. Again and again, she closes her eyes, feels, paints, and returns to the work until it feels complete—until the story has been told.

Her artistic practice is inseparable from her work as a body-oriented expressive arts therapist. At the heart of both is the same intention: creating space for what longs to become visible—not through analysis or control, but through direct experience.

She invites viewers to slow down, to look with presence and curiosity, and to discover what each painting awakens within them.

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Pauline Kamphuis