Transform Your Garden: Art from Recycled Materials

Laura Bernardeschi Nelson shares her artistic journey, transforming her garden into a vibrant living installation as she battles anxiety. Through innovative projects using recycled materials like CDs and vinyl records, she creates a colorful sanctuary. Emphasizing the importance of creativity, she encourages others to challenge mundane norms and embrace artistic expression.

Exploring Urban Fragility by Laura Bernardeschi Nelson

“A Future with No Address” is a 2026 mixed-media painting by Laura Bernardeschi Nelson, addressing themes of abandonment, environmental fragility, and urban uncertainty amid climate change. The work features two small figures navigating an empty cityscape, symbolizing displacement and human cost, while using materials like ground coffee to evoke consumption and decay.

A Journey

for sale on http://www.saatchiart.com/lauraartist68 Title: Rooted in HerArtist: Laura Bernardeschi Nelson Medium: Mixed media on board/canvas — acrylic paint, ground coffee, gesso, and natural pine elements. Description:This artwork explores the intimate bond between a young woman and Mother Nature. Her figure becomes a living landscape: vines and blossoms grow through her body, suggesting healing, belonging,ContinueContinue reading “A Journey”

Warming Sea

“Hands Over a Warming Sea” by Laura Bernardeschi Nelson (2025) is a mixed media artwork depicting human touch against a backdrop of an ocean. It features cold blue and violet tones, with wind turbines and 3D bamboo elements. The piece addresses themes of climate change and human connection amidst urgency and fragility.

Winter Landscape

Laura Bernardeschi Nelson’s oil pastel artworks, “After Frost” and “The Long Way Home,” both priced at £520, celebrate winter landscapes. “After Frost” depicts a vibrant waterfall amid snow-covered rocks, with warm dusk hues enhancing the tumultuous scene’s life. In contrast, “The Long Way Home” illustrates a gentle winter path leading toward a distant settlement, framed by a dynamic sky of green, violet, and rose. Each piece conveys a narrative of movement and stillness, capturing the essence of winter’s beauty. Both are signed, varnished, framed, and ready to hang, emphasizing their artistic significance.

Climate Advocacy

Laura Bernardeschi Nelson’s work is highlighted in the article “Debris and Restoration,” which discusses her focus on memory, identity, and the environment. The interview covers her artistic evolution, climate change themes, notable pieces, and her belief in art’s role in promoting environmental responsibility and personal storytelling.