Diana Zelnick (1941-2020)
Diana Zelnick’s artistic practice focused on portraits drawn from images she collected, including pages from fashion magazines, newspaper clippings, photographs found online, and snapshots of colleagues and staff. She approached these sources attuned to the elegance, gesture, and composition typical of fashion imagery. As she put it, “On the one hand we can simply photograph something beautiful; on the other, we can create our own personal artwork that has the same elegance as the photograph.”
Diana began drawing at a young age, an innate talent her family quickly recognized, and one she continued to cultivate throughout her life. Her process was intuitive and decisive, as decades of work will remain unseen, since she often discarded pieces that did not resonate with her or kindly gave them away. “I have no conceit about my art,” she said. “It's just there. Sometimes, when I have a hard time, it's very good for me.”
Her art was inseparable from her lifelong search through the arts, philosophy, religion, medicine, and the deep one-to-one conversations she held with those fortunate enough to know her. She shared her vulnerability openly and urged others to acknowledge their own. “People are complicated. There is no such thing as ‘normal.’” She reflected on the human condition: “People, in general, do not want to accept their own humanity. The general population doesn't allow themselves to relate to where mentally ill people are coming from, for as vulnerable as they are. People don’t want to see themselves as vulnerable, dependent.”
If forced to choose between living without visual art or music, Diana picked music—classical music, an appreciation deeply rooted in her family. Her addition to the collective studio playlist was Bach: “I don't care, anything Bach,” followed by a pause and then a request for piano instead of the stringed instruments. Her second choice was Mozart. One of her morning rituals was listening to 105.9 FM WQXR Classical Morning Bach at 7:30 AM, which she shared to stay connected during the pandemic, sometimes making an early phone call to the art collective studio to ask, “Are you listening?”
Throughout her life and work, Diana embodied a profound commitment to beauty, authenticity, and the full depth of human experience.
Please enjoy the work of our friend.
