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Shirley Suski

I have been fascinated with making things from clay for as long as I can remember. When I was a small child my mother would make little animals out of modeling clay and “make them talk.” It was my favorite playtime. Later we took clay sculpture classes at the park district together.

Background
I was born in Springfield, Illinois, and grew up in Chicago. One of my early teachers described me as a “sensitive soul.” I took art throughout high school and college and graduated with a BS in science and minor in art. Eventually I moved with my family to farmette in Mt. Carroll, Illinois, a small town near the Mississippi River. It was a more relaxed atmosphere and I bought a small kiln and started sculpting. The local art gallery encouraged me and sold some of my pieces. I enrolled in pottery classes at a nearby community college and after a time, opened a small gift shop/gallery on the river called River’s Edge. I taught clay classes to children in the back of my shop and wrote grants for artist-in-residence programs at my children’s school.

The Mississippi River gave me the opportunity to observe many types of birds and wildlife, which influenced my art. In 1998 our old farmhouse burned down while we were visiting my mother in Chicago. It seemed like a good time to start over. My family moved to Florida. I taught myself raku firing and loved playing with fire. I began to do fine art shows in 2000 with my pottery and sculpture. I took sculpture classes at night at Crealdé School of Art with the help of a Cheryl Bogdanowitch scholarship. I took hiatus from shows for a few years because of some life circumstances, but never lost the burning desire to create. I took some classes at Maitland Art Center in alternative firing and fell in love with saggar firing.
 
Process
I use wadded up newspaper and masking tape to create armatures for my animal slab sculptures. I like to show movement, fantasy, and character in my pieces. I recently began raku or saggar firing my sculptures and coil pots; I love the primitive look it gives. My bark vases are slabbed over cans. I hit them with a favorite piece of bark and a walnut shell and add woodsy elements to resemble the tree trunks in my yard. The bark is rubbed with oxides and the sculpted flowers, leaves, and birds are accented with glaze. I fire slowly over a couple days.

I hope my art “talks” to you.
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Awards & Exhibitions
  • 60th Annual Art Fiesta New Smyrna 2022: first place for pottery
  • ​Crealdé School of Art 27th Juried Student Exhibition 2007: 2nd place for sculpture, Sea Trio
  • Crealdé School of Art: 2006 Cheryl Bogdanowitsch Scholarship
  • Orlando Museum of Art 1st Thursdays’ Sculpture in the Round exhibition 2006: Beetle Taxi
  • Crealde School of Art 26th Juried Student Exhibition 2006: Carry Out
  • Osceola Center of the Arts 2006 Juried Art Exhibition: Beetle Taxi and Carry Out
  • Maitland Art Center 30/30 Compact Juried Competition: Rhino Ride
  • Crealde School of Art 25th Juried Student Exhibition: 3rd place for sculpture, Beetle Taxi
  • Crealde School of Art 24th Juried Student Exhibition: Rain God 
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