

My engagement with specific materials has a long family lineage beginning with my great grandfather, Julius Schubert, who emigrated from Denmark in 1870. Interweaving or layering of materials speaks to the balance between strength and fragility. My mode of combining materials mimics the ritual and repetition of walking in the forest.
#Blick art plaster cloth skin
To facilitate bridging this phenomena of shared skin like properties I have followed in the footsteps of Ana Mendieta by gathering found, up-cycled and recycled materials that are woven or cast into figurative sculptures and nest like assemblages. The bark of the tree is made up of living cells and acts as a skin which shields the tree from disease, animals and insects much like our own skin. They become a register of what’s happening through climate change, pollution and poisoned waters.” In my sculptures the tree is represented by references to bark using skin-like materials such as resin, hand made tree bark, chicken wire, cheese cloth and Ace Bandages. Reflecting on a quote from Janet Laurence from her work found in the exhibition After Nature, Laurence states, “Trees for me are the great signals of change.


The resilience of the tree and its adaptability to changes in the landscape is a model I use to express our shared human desire for strength and courage. I am curious about the psychic and spiritual effects experienced in this ritual of walking in the forest and how this manifests in processing concerns related to a range of emotions such as joy, loneliness, uncertainty, and fear. While walking I meditate on the ever present awareness of the impact on the human body and spirit as a result of cultural pressures, communication overload and isolation. Here the tree form acts as a metaphor, respite, teacher and model for my overall art practice where I combine many mediums and textures. Walking or wandering in a forested area is a daily part of my studio practice. It is an invitation to linger, a slow immersion into an environment like a cave or a forest that allows for transformation. With this type of ambulation, the role of gesture and habit are the foreground and suggest opportunities for ritual as material and conceptual connection with nature. Wandering, the deliberate moving off a set course is about non-conforming and remaining open to a new way of facing everyday challenges. The physical act of putting one foot in front of the other is repetitive and tied to rhythms of organic processes. Walking itself does not make art in the traditional sense except for perhaps a trail as seen in Richard Long’s A Line Made by Walking. When walking, we transgress and re-establish new boundaries by continually re-defining a new “frame” for our field of experience. She continues to add details and shadows with pastels, always “layering up to the light” to keep the colors from becoming muddy.In walking, interpretation frequently lags behind actual temporal experience.

Next, she brushes over the pastels with a solvent to transform them into a paint-like pigment. She then uses pastels to lay in flat areas of color, starting with the darkest colors and adding layers of lighter colors. Watch as Blick Featured Artist, Susan Kuznitsky, demonstrates her approach to plein air painting with pastels! 💜 Susan starts by quickly sketching out her composition's big positive and negative shapes with a charcoal pencil.
