Greenland #54 / 40″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Exploring Climate Change through Art:
Tackling climate change or the documentation of extreme environments can be challenging endeavors for any artist, but for Brooklyn-based Zaria Forman it was simply an extension of a childhood spent traveling with her family to some of the Earth’s most remote locations. For her 2012 project Chasing the Light, Forman led an ambitious art expedition by sailing up the northwest coast of Greenland to retrace the 1869 journey of American painter William Bradford. Along the way she documented the changing arctic landscape which she would use for inspiration in several large soft pastel drawings seen here. Her nearly photorealistic works exquisitely capture the atmosphere and mood of a landscape in flux.
Greenland #56 / 40″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Greenland #62 / 47″ x 70″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Greenland #50 / 40″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Greenland #52 / 55″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Greenland #63 / 50″ x 75″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Maldives #1 / 40″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
In late 2013, Forman traveled to the Maldives, the lowest-lying country in the world, and an area said to be most vulnerable to rising sea levels, where she completed another body of work focusing on the rising ocean tides. The resulting drawings create an alluring juxtaposition of beauty and menace. Similar journeys have taken the artist to locations around Israel, Nosara, and Svalbard.
Maldives #2 / 41″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Maldives #3 / 30″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Maldives #4 / 41″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Maldives #5 / 45″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Nosara #1 / 45″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
If you’d like to learn more about Forman’s work she currently has several original works available on Artsy and you can purchase prints over on ArtStar. The artist has an upcoming exhibition at Carla Massoni Gallery that opens in March, and if you have a good eye you can spot 10 of her drawings used on the sets of Netflix’s smash hit House of Cards. You can also follow her on Facebook. (via Gaks Designs)
Giant Pastel Oceanscapes and Icebergs Drawn by Zaria Formanby
Christopher Jobson, January 2, 2014
Tackling climate change or the documentation of extreme environments can be challenging endeavors for any artist, but for Brooklyn-based Zaria Forman it was simply an extension of a childhood spent traveling with her family to some of the Earth’s most remote locations. For her 2012 project Chasing the Light, Forman led an ambitious art expedition by sailing up the northwest coast of Greenland to retrace the 1869 journey of American painter William Bradford. Along the way she documented the changing arctic landscape which she would use for inspiration in several large soft pastel drawings seen here. Her nearly photorealistic works exquisitely capture the atmosphere and mood of a landscape in flux.
Greenland #56 / 40″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Greenland #62 / 47″ x 70″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Greenland #50 / 40″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Greenland #52 / 55″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Greenland #63 / 50″ x 75″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Maldives #1 / 40″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
In late 2013, Forman traveled to the Maldives, the lowest-lying country in the world, and an area said to be most vulnerable to rising sea levels, where she completed another body of work focusing on the rising ocean tides. The resulting drawings create an alluring juxtaposition of beauty and menace. Similar journeys have taken the artist to locations around Israel, Nosara, and Svalbard.
Maldives #2 / 41″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Maldives #3 / 30″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Maldives #4 / 41″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Maldives #5 / 45″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
Nosara #1 / 45″ x 60″ / Soft pastel on paper.
If you’d like to learn more about Forman’s work she currently has several original works available on Artsy and you can purchase prints over on ArtStar. The artist has an upcoming exhibition at Carla Massoni Gallery that opens in March, and if you have a good eye you can spot 10 of her drawings used on the sets of Netflix’s smash hit House of Cards. You can also follow her on Facebook. (via Gaks Designs)
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