Susan Robb

Susan Robb
Known for Artist
Website http://www.susanrobb.com/

Susan Robb is a visual artist based in Seattle, Washington.

Life

Susan Robb is a west-coast based interdisciplinary artist who examines the interrelatedness between people and place. Her work has been shown nationally and internationally including exhibitions at the Henry Art Gallery, the Berkley Art Museum, and Blindside Gallery in Melbourne, Australia. Robb was born in Connecticut[1] and attended Syracuse University in New York where she received a BFA in Photography and a BA in Art History. She obtained her MFA in photography at University of Washington in Seattle. Robb also played in the music projects Incredible Force of Junior and Goatmax1.[2]

Artistic practice

Susan Robb’s work is an ongoing investigation of people, place and the search for utopia. She orchestrates temporary, site-responsive and socially-engaged projects to transform contemporary concerns—climate crisis, social isolation, high-speed daily living—into opportunities to re-envision and re-connect.[3] Drawing on her own travel experiences, the utopian thought at play in intentional communities, and the hands-on ethos of DIY subcultures, she depicts the kaleidoscopic relationship we have with our surroundings. Works such as Sleeper Cell Training Camp, The Long Walk, and Scent of the Trails require spontaneous involvement from her audience and in return deliver a reordering of the expected relationships to each other and their surroundings. She combines poetic applications of technology (from muscle wire circuitry to methane digesters), an interrogation and manipulation of materials (giant black plastic bags to cultured crystals), and a re-purposing of forms and sites (bike parking-as-social hub; hiking trail-as-game space).[4]

Projects

Robb has undertaken several long-form project involving travel and site-specific exploration including

Selected Bibliography

Awards and Major Grants

References

  1. Ayers, Robert. "Susan Robb: connecting people and the wilderness". The Seattle Times. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  2. "Susan Robb". These Streets: A Rock 'n' Roll Story. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  3. http://creative-capital.org/grantees/view/632/project:756undefined. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  4. http://artisttrust.org/index.php/award-winners/artist-profile/susan_robb. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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