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ARTIST'S STATEMENT
Although I'll paint any subject that captures my fancy, my favorite subject is
the natural world, especially animals. I work in a traditional oil technique,
always striving for a personal, painterly expression. Fieldwork to see my subjects
in their own habitat is extremely important. My travels to accomplish this have
included trips to Mongolia, Kenya, Canada and Yellowstone, Grand Tetons and Glacier
National Parks. I take many photos (over 4500 in 16 days on my Oct. 2004 trip to
Kenya) and sketch on location as much as possible. Drawing is a fundamental part
of painting and, fortunately, I love to draw.
I have found that when you take the time to sit and watch animals, as opposed to
just mentally checking off seeing them, they inevitably reveal insights into their
lives which are totally separate from any relationship, or perceived value, to
humans. The chance to record those moments on canvas is one of the things that
gets my creative juices flowing. Animals are all individuals just as we are,
with their own habits and quirks. It is this individuality of our fellow sentient
beings that I always aspire to communicate in my work along with the beauty and
intrinsic value of the places where they live.
The planet Earth belongs to all of us together- humans, animals and plants. If
there are no good places for them, then ultimately there will be no good places
for us either. We are just barely beginning to comprehend how interconnected
and mutually dependent our world is. Perhaps one thing my paintings can do is
demonstrate how much there is to lose in a world where human pressure is causing
more extinctions and habitat destruction than at any time since the age of the
dinosaurs. The natural world has an absolute intrinsic value separate from any
impermanent human ones. Communicating that value is one of my goals as an artist.
One of my fondest hopes for the future of our species is that we will finally
grow up and learn to share.
PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS
Society of Animal Artists
Oil Painters of America
California Art Club
Artists for Conservation
Susan K. Black Foundation
Humboldt Arts Council
EDUCATION
Academy of Art College, BFA Illustration, 1989
Oxford University Christchurch, Summer Session, 1989
The Illustration Academy , 1990, 1991
John Seerey-Lester Master Class, 1997
Beartooth School of Art
John Seerey-Lester, Paco Young, 1999
Paco Young, 2001
John Banovich, 2002
Jackson Hole Art Academy
Jim Wilcox, 2003
Scott Christensen Ten Day Plein Air Intensive, 2004
Simon Combes' Artist Safari, Kenya, 2004
SELECTED SHOWS/COMPETITIONS
Artist’s Magazine Art Competition (Wildlife) - Finalist, 1991
Humboldt Arts Council Membership Shows - 1998, 1999, 2000
William F. Cody Gallery Juried Competition - 1999
"Our Excellent Adventure: Three Wildlife Artists on the Road" -
William F. Cody Gallery, August, 2000
"California Species" juried show - Oakland Museum of California
Natural Sciences Department, September 30, 2000 through May 13, 2001
"Just Outside My Door: Flora and Fauna of Kane Ridge" -
Humboldt State University Natural History Museum, June-August 2002
"The Art of Seeing: Nature Revealed Through Illustration" -
Oakland Museum of California, Natural Sciences Department, 2003, 2006
"Art for the Parks - Top 100" - National Parks Foundation, 2003
"Marine Wildlife" - Mendocino Art Center, 2007
http://www.mendocinoartcenter.org
"Art and the Animal Kingdom XI" - Bennington Center for the Arts, 2006
http://www.benningtoncenterforthearts.org
"The Art of the Horse" - New Jersey Equine Artists Association, 2006
http://www.njeaa.com/
"American Artists Abroad" - Bennington Center for the Arts, 2006, 2007
http://www.benningtoncenterforthearts.org
"Art and the Animal Kingdom XII" - Bennington center for the Arts, 2007
http://www.benningtoncenterforthearts.org
"Art and the Animal Kingdom XIII" - Bennington center for the Arts, 2008
http://www.benningtoncenterforthearts.org
"Wild Things" - California Art Club, 2007
Juror's Choice Award
http://www.californiaartclub.org/
ARTIST'S BIOGRAPHY
Susan Fox was born in Los Angeles in 1953, but her parents
moved to the northern California coastal town of Eureka in
1955. Drawing and reading were her two favorite activities as a child. Her first
artistic triumph at around age nine was placing second in a contest sponsored by
a local shoe store which required the entrants to draw a cartoon character wearing
Keds sneakers. She drew Pepi LePew wearing bright red ones. The first prize was a
live skunk, which she desperately wanted. Second prize was a canvas trampoline.
Her first life lesson in being gracious in defeat came when her mom took her to the
store to collect her prize and she had to smile and act happy about receiving a
prize for which she could have cared less.
Her first art lessons at age eleven were through the Redwood Art Association
on Saturday mornings. They were held on the ground floor of a very large and
otherwise empty gingerbread Victorian. She worked in a brand new media, acrylics,
often with a palette knife. She had already been drawing, though, since she was
old enough to hold a pencil. More often than not, the subject was animals.
Susan attended College of the Redwoods (A.A.-1974) and Humboldt State
University, taking a variety of art classes at both schools.
She got her first job in an art-related field in 1976 when she became an
apprentice at a local sign shop. She worked there for five years, learning the
sign trade and graphic design. She also became an expert at posthole digging,
running power tools, setting up 20 ft. extension ladders and planks and driving
a dark blue 1956 Ford pickup truck.
After a move to Napa and then Berkeley, Susan worked as a freelance graphic
designer for a variety of clients, including a natural foods store, a brew pub,
an oriental rug retailer and a video rental outlet.
She went back to school in 1987 and majored in illustration at the Academy
of Art College (now University) in San Francisco. Her courses included up to nine hours of drawing
a week plus doing a finished illustration. Susan received her BFA Illustration
degree in 1989.
She attended a summer art class at Christchurch College, Oxford University
for three weeks in the summer of 1989. Days were spent out on Tom Quad or in the
cloisters working on various projects. One day the class was allowed into the
Master's Garden to sketch and paint the gate that Alice used to go down the
rabbit hole and the tree in which she saw the Cheshire Cat. (Lewis Carroll taught
at Christ Church and used different bits for settings in his classic story,
Alice in Wonderland.) On Sunday evenings she could sit in her room in a dormitory
building designed by John Ruskin and listen as, one after another, the bells of
the various Colleges pealed out on the soft summer air.
In early 1990, she moved back to Eureka and spent the next few years doing
freelance design and illustration for local and national clients. For a short time,
she combined her studio with running a gallery filled with art created by her
friends and acquaintances.
Starting in 1995, she studied traditional oil painting for over two years
with a local instructor. Since then, Susan has had a number of one
person shows and has participated in a number of national juried shows and many
group shows in Humboldt County.
She enjoys traveling and has been to Japan, Mongolia, Kenya, England, Germany,
Sweden, France, Italy, Portugal and Canada.
In January of 1999, Susan spent three weeks in Kenya at a tented camp and on an
Earthwatch project studying Lake Naivasha. In October of 2004, Susan went back to
Kenya on an artist workshop safari with the late Simon Combes.
In April/May of 2005, Susan went to Mongolia on another Earthwatch project,
Mongolian Argali. She also visited a national park where takhi (Przewalski’s horse)
have been reintroduced. In the fall of 2006, Susan traveled back to Mongolia
for three weeks. She returned to Hustai and the nature reserve to see the
takhi at a different time of year. New destinations included the Gobi
Desert and the newest takhi release site in western Mongolia.
Photos of both Kenyan trips and her journeys to Mongolia can be viewed in the
But Wait! There's More... section of her
website, along with a journal from the 1999 trip and an
article on her first experience in Mongolia.
Her USA travels have included Montana, Wyoming, Florida, Ohio, West Virginia,
Washington, Oregon, Alaska and Hawaii.
Susan and her husband, collie and four cats live on the
coast of Northern California in a pleasant rural area called Dow's Prairie, twenty
minutes from Redwood National Park and about five minutes from the beach.
AFC Conservation Artist of the Month for March 2008
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