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・ Susan Polgar
・ Susan Polis Schutz
・ Susan Polk
・ Susan Powell
・ Susan Powell (cyclist)
・ Susan Powell (Miss America)
・ Susan Powell (weather forecaster)
・ Susan Power
・ Susan Powers
・ Susan Powter
・ Susan Pratt
・ Susan Price
・ Susan Price (academic)
・ Susan Meyer Markle
・ Susan Michie
Susan Michod
・ Susan Middleton
・ Susan Milan
・ Susan Miles
・ Susan Millar DuMars
・ Susan Miller
・ Susan Miller (playwright)
・ Susan Miller (producer)
・ Susan Miller Dorsey
・ Susan Miller Dorsey High School
・ Susan Miller Rambo
・ Susan Miller, Baroness Miller of Chilthorne Domer
・ Susan Minot
・ Susan Misner
・ Susan Mitchell


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Susan Michod : ウィキペディア英語版
Susan Michod
Susan Michod (born 1945, Toledo, OH) is an American feminist painter who has been at the forefront of the Pattern and Decoration movement since 1969. Her work "consists of monumental paintings (is ) thickly painted, torn, collaged, spattered, sponged, sprinkled with glitter and infused with a spirit of love of nature and art," the art critic Sue Taylor has written.
After graduating with a Master of Fine Arts from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, Michod moved to Chicago in 1969 and joined a tight-knit community of artists which included Judy Chicago, Vera Klement, Phyllis Bramson, Margaret Wharton, (Richard Loving ), Robert Kushner, and Nancy Spero. She taught as a Professor of Art at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts.
In 1973, Susan Michod co-founded the nonprofit women artists' collaborative Artemisia Gallery. Like the groundbreaking A.I.R. Gallery in New York opened just a year earlier, Artemisia was a forum for women to exhibit their art away from the male-dominated gallery scene. Judy Chicago, Miriam Schapiro, Joyce Kozloff and Nancy Spero were among the artists who exhibited their early work at Artemisia.
Susan Michod's work has been exhibited at the Art Institute of Chicago, the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago, the Queens Museum, the Bronx Museum of the Arts and the National Academy in New York City, and it is in the collection of Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago and the Illinois State Museum.
== Work ==
During the 1970s Michod began to travel extensively to Yucatán Peninsula, Mexico City and Tucson, Arizona studying indigenous art and pottery. Her paintings incorporated the designs found in Navajo weaving and Mayan ceramics, but her work was also influenced by the bright colors and bold visual movement of work produced by Henri Matisse and Josef Albers, among others.〔
In 1977, John Perreault championed Susan Michod's work when he selected her work for inclusion in a groundbreaking “Pattern and Decoration" show he curated at PS1 (now (MoMAPS1 )) in Long Island City.
In the 1980s, Michod branched away from pattern painting toward a more surrealistic style of painting incorporating found objects like toy Tonka tractors, farming equipment (plows, etc.), hair dryers, squeegees, and paneled household doors. Writing in the March 1983 issue of Artforum, the critic Judith Russi Kirshner wrote that Michod's "orchestration of two and three-dimensional fauna objects that extend the painted characters into our space recalls the mood of Walt Disney’s Fantasia"; "fueled by () the accoutrements of domesticity and motherhood," the paintings are "populated by children's playthings and animated by a child's spirit of fantasy."
In 1997, Susan Michod exhibited a series of paintings at the Chicago Cultural Center called "Fragile Landscapes." The paintings were based on the artist's experience living through a rare brain tumor she suffered in 1992 called an oligodendroglioma. The paintings, landscapes "dominated by a forest motif in neb-expressionist style," were hailed by the Chicago Tribune as being "repositories of feelings" in which "each of the forest pictures has a spectator who reacts in various ways to Michod's maelstrom of strokes and blaze of light. The figure is a stand-in for actual viewers, that is, a member of the audience; but it is also the artist herself serving us as Virgil did Dante in the forest of the Inferno, as a guide."

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