Why Us, Virus? |
ARTIST STATEMENT My paintings combine abstraction with science and mathematics. For many years I have used scientific concepts in my artwork. The scientific and the mathematical images in my paintings are derived from real scientific research. They describe our new understanding of the universe. The artistic and scientific revolutions of the last hundred years have changed our lives and the world around us in basic and profound ways. I feel it is important for my work to reflect this perspective. My abstract paintings, combined with scientific notation and the concepts they describe, reflect different aspects of reality that exist simultaneously in our world. I paint with acrylic on canvas or wood panel and on paper with collage and monotype. My paintings range from tiny (one inch square) to as large as sixteen feet. Art, life, matter, and all the universal forces form complex systems. In my work I attempt to show how all the different parts are linked and integrated. My paintings are based on combining the elegance of science and the visual richness of art. |
|
Recent PressMichael Paglia review: Art Explores Symbols,Anchors and, Solos at Smith and Spark, Westword, June 5, 2019
Ray Mark Rinaldi review: Rosy and rousing remembrances of the Women's March, The Denver Post, June 24, 2018 Michael Paglia review: Painted Thoughts, Westword, November 2018 5280 Magazine, July 2017 Calendar: Arts & Exhibits: "Cookies and the Cosmos" Thought provoking abstract artist Sue Simon combines her two passions - science and painting - in this quirky exhibit. To show that both small and large objects are part of the same solar system, the Denver creative depicts Oreos and fortune cookies in orbit alongside numbers and mathematical formula in her oils and collages. BEST OF WESTWORD 2015: Best Display of Abstraction’s Feminine Side, Edge Gallery Michael Paglia, Review: Solos Inspired by Chemistry, Junk and Geometry at Spark, May 6, 2016 Michael Paglia, Art Review: Getting the Concept with Unexpected Narratives and Roland Bernier, February 3, 2016 Michael Paglia, Review: These Four Artists Have Cracked the Code at the Sandra Phillips Gallery, August 13, 2014 |
|