Susan Silas


Susan Silas is a visual artist and writer living in Brooklyn, New York. Silas is a dual American and Hungarian national who has built a diverse career as an artist during the past two decades. Silas has been exhibiting her work in the US and in Europe since 1985, and has taught at New York University and Cooper Union.

Education and early career

Silas received her BA in history from Reed College and her Masters in Fine Arts from California Institute of the Arts. After completing her graduate studies in 1983, she moved from Los Angeles back to New York. Soon afterwards, she began exhibiting her work in group exhibitions including: White Columns, New York; New Langton Arts, San Francisco; Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles; Cal Arts: Skeptical Belief; The Renaissance Society, Chicago; Girls Night Out; Femininity as Masquerade, The New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York; and Bridges and Boundaries The Jewish Museum, New York. In 1990, Silas had her first solo exhibition, at fiction/nonfiction in New York. This exhibition was followed in 1991 by a solo exhibition in Paris at Galerie Antoine Candau.

Work on landscape and “Holocaust Postmemory”

Starting in the late 1990s, Silas’s work focused on 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 by Dora Apel and was the subject of an interview with her for a broadcast on BBC radio and more recently with . In November 2005 this work, along with a video installation were the subject of a solo exhibition at the Koffler Gallery in Toronto, accompanied by an essay on her work by the scholar Brett Ashley Kaplan. Helmbrechts walk, 1998-2003 was exhibited at from September 2009 to June 2010 and then traveled in an English/German edition to Kunstverein Grafschaft Bentheim in Neuenhaus, Germany in the summer of 2010 and to Kunsthalle Exnergasse in Vienna in the fall of that year. In 2011 this work was included in the exhibition Continuity at Center for Contemporary Arts, Celje, Slovenia curated by Irena Cercnik. A fuller consideration of this work was recently published in by Brett Ashley Kaplan. Other recent works include a four screen video installation of the four Nazi death camps in German occupied Poland, Untitled , shown in February, 2001 at the Cooley Memorial Gallery in Portland, Oregon and a sound work on CD exhibited at the Staller Center at Stony Brook. The artist’s most recent work on the Shoah is a six-channel video installation titled Treblinka Song and The Happy Wanderer.

Recent work

In the 2010s, Silas exhibited work consisting of an ongoing study of decaying birds.
“To put it in terms reflective of Silas’s photographic process and subject, Silas had to find the entropy that would hold us enrapt, keep us from turning away. Here there is no contest. Of all animals, none preserve the beauty and dignity of death with a grandeur and longevity approaching that of the many species of birds.” G. Roger Denson
A selection from this body of work entitled eyes wide shut, 2010 was exhibited in a solo exhibition at in Los Angeles, CA from April 9 - May 14, 2011 along with the premiere of the video performance A child of sixties television singing songs that got stuck in her head. Images from the series RAVEN were exhibited at CB1 Gallery in September, 2013.
In March 2014, Silas's photo collections love in the ruins; sex over 50 and the self-portrait sessions were exhibited in Bushwick, New York. In December 2015, during Art Basel Miami the artist realized a billboard that was located on I-195 in the Design District, sponsored by The Knight Foundation and AIRIE. New work in the series , including photographs, video and sculpture were exhibited at CB1 Gallery in June 2016.
Silas’s work, love in the ruins; sex over 50 was included in the group exhibition , curated by Andrea Jahn at Stadtgalerie Saarbrücken in Saarbrücken, Germany. The exhibition ran from May 5, 2018 to January 13, 2019. The exhibition catalogue, was published in 2019.

Post-Photography/Digital Sculpture

Silas’s recent sculptural, photographic and motion capture video works are self-portraiture created via photogrammetry. They retain an element of the indexical as well as an obvious iconic value. To carve the sculpture, information obtained via this photographic process must be translated into data in the form of an object file and then reprogrammed into software that recognizes the information as a model to be milled by a . This process, while completely data driven, does retain a ghost of the index. The data is reversed engineered back into a material likeness easily recognizable as the artist. The same object file used to create the sculpture, can be placed in 3D software and photographed as if it were a model, generating a set of 2D self-portraits, whose iconic value remains in tact, while its function as an index, becomes less certain. As such, these sculptures, photographic portraits and videos straddle the line between digital photography and post-photography or simulation technology, living in an ambiguous interstitial space.
Her first digital sculpture, AGING VENUS, 2018 was shown in the exhibition , co-curated by Claudia Hart and Susan Silas with Stephanie Dinkins, Claudia Hart, Carla Gannis, Sophie Kahn and Susan Silas at bitforms gallery in 2018. The sculpture then traveled to in Detroit for the group exhibition , curated by Alison Wong.

Publications

Silas has written featured articles for the online magazines and Hyperallergic. She has been published in Podium, the online literary magazine of the 92nd Street Y in New York City, on channel 13’s website , in the literary magazine , in cultureID, in the column in the Sunday New York Times, and most recently on the blog of the Theo Westernberger Estate. She is a regular contributor to Hyperallergic and the co-editor of the artblog MOMMY. Her books include eyes wide shut published by Horned Screamer Press and TO SELVES: Joy Episalla and Susan Silas published by 2 WORKS PRESS. Recent interviews with the artist can be found in ADULT magazine, , Museum of Non Visible Art at Yale University Radio and "Ms. Represent: Behind the Face, a Fierce Woman" at Rabble magazine.

Selected bibliography