- Susan Silas
Susan Silas is a visual artist and writer living in
Brooklyn, New York . She received her BA in history fromReed College and her Masters in Fine Arts fromCalifornia Institute of the Arts . Silas is a dual American and Hungarian national who has built a diverse career as an artist during the past two decades. After completing her graduate studies in 1983, she moved from Los Angeles back to New York. Soon afterwards, she began exhibiting her work in many group exhibitions including at:White Columns , New York;New Langton Arts , San Francisco; Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles; "Cal Arts: Skeptical Belief(s)"The Renaissance Society , Chicago; "Girls Night Out; Femininity as Masquerade",The New Museum of Contemporary Art , New York; and "Bridges and Boundaries" TheJewish Museum , New York.In 1990, Silas had her first solo exhibition, at "fiction/nonfiction" in New York. This exhibition was followed in 1991 by her first solo exhibition in
Paris atGalerie Antoine Candau .For the past decade her work has focused on the landscape and memory. In 1997, she began working on "Helmbrechts walk, 1998-2003", a project in which she retraced the steps of an historical death march of all women that took place at the close of the
Second World War , walking for 22 days and 225 miles in Eastern Europe. This work found several forms: an unbound 48 plate artist book, a video installation and a slide projection. It has been discussed in the chapter on her work in the book [http://www.amazon.com/dp/0813530490 Memory Effects: The Holocaust and the Art of Secondary Witnessing] byDora Apel and was the subject of an interview with her for a broadcast onBBC radio. In November of 2005 this work,along with a video installation were the subject of a solo exhibition at theKoffler Gallery inToronto , accompanied by an essay on her work by the scholar Brett Ashley Kaplan. Other recent works include a four screen video installation of the four death camps in Poland, "untitled (11-14 May 1998)", shown in February, 2001 at theCooley Memorial Gallery inPortland, Oregon and a sound work on CD exhibited at theStaller Center at Stony Brook.Silas has written featured articles for the online magazine [http://artnet.com ArtNet] , has been exhibiting her work in the US and in Europe since 1985, and has taught at
New York University andCooper Union .External links
* [http://www.susansilas.com/ artists's homepage]
* [http://www.artnet.com/magazine_pre2000/features/silas/silas5-1-97.asp a love letter to oleg kulik] , by Susan Silas, Artnet Magazine, May 1, 1997
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