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  1. Susan Weil is a painter, printmaker, and book artist who grew up in New York and still lives there today. She had an unusual and creative childhood before going to Paris to study at the Academie Julian, where she met artist Robert Rauschenberg. In the fall of 1948, they went together to Black Mountain College to study with Josef Albers.

  2. The Epiphanies. 1987. By James Joyce. Interpreted by Susan Weil and Marjorie van Dyke. Edition: 50 copies signed by the artists. Etchings: Editioned by Marjorie Van Dyke and Vincent FitzGerald at The Printmaking Workshop. Publisher: Vincent FitzGerald & Co. Lithography: Editioned by Rhae Burden at The Printmaking Workshop. Collage: Zahra Partovi.

  3. www.moma.org › artists › 7704Susan Weil | MoMA

    2 de nov. de 2016 · American, born 1930

  4. susanweil.com › category › essaySUSAN WEIL — Essay

    Adapted from an essay by Sundaram Tagore in the book Susan Weil: Moving Pictures, published by Skira Editore in 2011. ESSAY. One of the most intrepid artists working today, Susan Weil has been breaking new ground in the field of painting for more than half a century. I was introduced to Susan in 1999 by Robert Rauschenberg, shortly after I had ...

  5. SUSAN WEIL. SELECTED NEW WORKS. ←Return To Works. VIEW MORE. Selection of Works 2010 - 2020. SELECTION OF WORKS 2010 - 2020. Blueprints. BLUEPRINTS. Trees. TREES. Soft Folds. SOFT FOLDS. NEW WORKS. Haphazard or Happilyhazard 2023 Broken glass on artist board, 9 components

  6. Susan Weil is an artist who came of age in the New York School in the 1950s. She depicts time, motion and language often fracturing the picture plane in her work, deconstructing and reconstructing images using a range of materials including collage, blueprint, and paint on recycled canvas, acrylic and wood.

  7. jdj.world › artists › susan-weilSusan Weil | JDJ

    Susan Weil, Color Configurations 2 (Red), 2000 (detail) She deconstructs the picture plane, coaxing representational imagery into abstraction. She draws inspiration from nature, literature, photography, and her personal history. Susan Weil, Sorrowing, 1985, Acrylic on canvas, 26 1/2 x 14 in.