b. 1930, United States

Susan Weil Biography

Working across paintings, sculptures, cyanotypes, fragmented panels, and digital prints, Susan Weil oscillates between figurative and abstract elements to contemplate form, perspective, and space. Active since the 1940s, Weil is recognised as one of the most influential female artists of Abstract Expressionism, a movement dominated predominantly by men.

Read More

Weil attended the experimental Black Mountain College in 1948, taking her classes under the former Bauhaus academic and artist Josef Albers. She moved to New York a year later, where she was surrounded by early proponents of Abstract Expressionism, among them Jasper Johns, William de Kooning, and Cy Twombly, and leading pioneers in different disciplines of the arts, such as the composer John Cage.

Between 1949 and 1951, Weil collaborated with her then-husband Robert Rauschenberg—also a fellow student from Black Mountain College—to create a series of large-scale blueprints. They experimented with light exposure and the imprints left behind by the human body in works such as Sue (c. 1950), which shows a full-body profile of Weil standing with a cane in her hands.

Weil's approach to abstraction is distinct from her contemporaries in that it readily explores the figurative. Walking and standing figures appear frequently in her early works, such as the rainbow-coloured plexiglass sculpture Standing Figure (1967) or the greyscale oil painting Walking (1969). Other recurring motifs include trees, which often appear fragmented on canvases of different sizes that make up a larger plant (Baroque Tree, 2006), and the Irish novelist James Joyce and his works that inspired a series of portraits and collages.

Weil is also known for her use of an eclectic range of materials that she rearranges into compositions, from metal, wood, and paper to recycled items. In Quadrille (1981), canvases are crumpled and conjoined; the colours on both their sides—black on one side and a primary colour on the other—are visible to the eye. Flexible poplar plywood forms the basis of works such as Bird (2017), where a line drawing of a bird morphs into a sculpture by rising off the surface of the wood.

Cyanotypes and collaboration continue to be key elements of Weil's practice. In 2000, the artist began working with photographer Jose Betancourt to produce blueprints, photograms, and Van Dyke Brown prints that examines the history of photography and the ideas of space and shape. Another collaborative work, Five Generations (2019), spans across several decades, beginning as an embroidery depicting stars by Weil's mother in 1930 and completed by the artist, her daughter, and granddaughter's contributions of cyanotypes and metal cut-outs.

Selected solo exhibitions include Art Hysteri of Susan Weil: 70 Years of Innovation and Wit, an online retrospective exhibition at Sundaram Tagore Gallery (2020); Susan Weil's James Joyce: Shut Your Eyes and See, The Poetry Centre, State University of New York, University of Buffalo (2016); and Poemumbles: 30 Years of Susan Weil's Poem | Images, The Black Mountain College Museum, North Carolina (2015). Weil is the recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship.

Weil's works are in the collections of the National Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Victoria and Albert Museum, London; and The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, among others.

Susan Weil
featured artworks

View 27 More
Birdsong by Susan Weil contemporary artwork textile
Susan Weil Birdsong, 2007 Blueprint on fabric
195.6 x 111.8 cm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery Request Price & Availability
Untitled by Susan Weil contemporary artwork mixed media
Susan Weil Untitled, 2022 Acrylic on plexiglass, lace, wire mesh and chicken wire (16 components)
125.7 x 125.7 cm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery Request Price & Availability
Color Wheel by Susan Weil contemporary artwork painting
Susan Weil Color Wheel, 2008 Acrylic on solid wood panels
110 x 105 x 15 cm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery Request Price & Availability
Standing Figure by Susan Weil contemporary artwork painting, works on paper
Susan Weil Standing Figure, 1967 Acrylic on Plexiglas
123.2 x 165.1 cm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery Request Price & Availability
Whirly Bird by Susan Weil contemporary artwork painting, works on paper, drawing
Susan Weil Whirly Bird, 2021 Acrylic and charcoal on canvas with adhered cut canvas
51 x 51 x 4 cm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery Request Price & Availability
Primary Hidden Secondary by Susan Weil contemporary artwork painting
Susan Weil Primary Hidden Secondary, 2021 Acrylic on canvas
92.4 x 56.4 x 17.1 cm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery Request Price & Availability
Homage to the Tear 2 by Susan Weil contemporary artwork painting, works on paper
Susan Weil Homage to the Tear 2, 1980 Acrylic on paper
78.7 x 167.6 x 13.3 cm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery Request Price & Availability
Small Phases of Moon by Susan Weil contemporary artwork painting, photography
Susan Weil Small Phases of Moon, 2011 Cyanotype and acrylic on canvas
49.5 x 61 x 12.7 cm
Sundaram Tagore Gallery Request Price & Availability
View 27 More

Susan Weil
current & recent
exhibitions

View 11 More
View 11 More

Represented by this
Ocula Member Gallery

Sundaram Tagore Gallery contemporary art gallery in New York, New York, United States
Sundaram Tagore Gallery London, New York, Singapore
View 11 More

Susan Weil in
Ocula Magazine

Learn more about the market for works
by Susan Weil.
Enquire for a confidential discussion. Enquire Now
Simon Fisher, Ocula CEO
Ocula Advisor
Simon Fisher
Christoper Taylor, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Christopher Taylor
Eva Fuchs, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Eva Fuchs
Rory Mitchell, Ocula Advisor
Ocula Advisor
Rory Mitchell
Ocula discover the best in contemporary art icon.
Follow Susan Weil
Stay ahead.
Receive updates on new artworks,
exhibitions and articles.
Your personal data is held in accordance with our privacy policy.
Follow
Do you have an Ocula account?
Ocula discover the best in contemporary art icon.
Get Access
Join Ocula to request price and availability of artworks, exhibition price lists and build a collection of favourite artists, galleries and artworks.
Do you have an Ocula account? Login
What best describes your interest in art?

Subscribe to our newsletter for upcoming exhibitions, available works, events and more.
By clicking Sign Up or Continue with Facebook or Google, you agree to Ocula's Terms & Conditions. Your personal data is held in accordance with our Privacy Policy.
Thank you for joining us. Just one more thing...
Soon you will receive an email asking you to complete registration. If you do not receive it then you can check and edit the email address you entered.
Close
Thank you for joining us.
You can now request price and availability of artworks, exhibition price lists and build a collection of favourite artists, galleries and artworks.
Close
Welcome back to Ocula
Enter your email address and password below to login.
Reset Password
Enter your email address to receive a password reset link.
Reset Link Sent
We have sent you an email containing a link to reset your password. Simply click the link and enter your new password to complete this process.
Login