Tanya Marcuse

Artist Statement

My large-scale photographs explore the imperiled natural world and the dynamic tension between the passage of time and the photographic medium. I construct elaborate tableaux and use increasingly fantastical imagery to investigate cycles of growth and decay, creation and destruction. While the final work is a photograph (or film), my methods often involve painting, sculpting—even gardening. My most recent project, Book of Miracles, began during the early months of the pandemic and has unfolded against a backdrop of political and environmental crises. It draws inspiration from the 16th-century Wunderzeichenbuch (Book of Miracles), an illustrated compendium of biblical, astronomical, and apocalyptic wonders and omens. I use paint, fire, and staged scenes to visualize events that seem to defy natural laws, creating images that reward slow looking and suggest that the miraculous may be hiding in plain sight. Photography often walks a thin line between fact and fiction; my work embraces this ambiguity, inviting viewers into an expanded sense of what is possible and real.

Tanya Marcuse Nº 4a Book of Miracles (Part I Kingdom) 62 x 124"

Bio

Tanya Marcuse (b. 1964) is an American photographer whose work has been exhibited internationally. Her work is held in major public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the George Eastman Museum, the National Gallery of Art, the Baltimore Museum of Art, and the Yale University Art Gallery. She has received a Guggenheim Fellowship, a Peter S. Reed Grant, an American Scandinavian Fellowship, two MacDowell Fellowships, and a 2025 NYFA Fellowship. Marcuse began photographing as an early college student at Bard College at Simon’s Rock before studying Art History and Studio Art at Oberlin College. She earned her MFA from Yale University. Her books include Undergarments and Armor (2005), Wax Bodies (2012), Fruitless | Fallen | Woven (2019), Ink (2021), Portent (2024), Deer (2026), and Book of Miracles (forthcoming, Radius Books). Marcuse lives and works in New York’s Hudson Valley, and teaches at Bard College.


www.tanyamarcuse.com



Adriane Colburn

Artist Statement

Over the past several years I have developed a body of work based on the complex relationship between human infrastructure, earth systems, technology and the natural world. These drawings, sculptures and installations are derived from my research into landscape history, ecology and global systems. Within this practice, an enthusiasm for the abstract compositions of mapping (and its ability visualize systems that could not be otherwise seen as a whole), is woven with a long-standing investment in materiality and the natural world, a fascination with global systems and an early and sustained interest in Climate Disruption.

Everything is Everything, 2023 Photo: Adriane Colburn

Bio

Adriane Colburn is an artist based in Jersey City, NJ and Vermont. Her work reflects a long-standing investment in materiality, extraction and the natural world; a fascination with mapping and global systems; and an early and sustained interest in Climate Disruption. Her work has been exhibited broadly including at Smack Mellon, and Parsons/New School in New York, Gallery 16 and The Yerba Buena Center in San Francisco, Ballroom Marfa, TX, Artsterium in the Republic of Georgia, the Eres Foundation in Munich, The Berman Museum, PA and at the Royal Academy of Art in London. Her work has been shaped by artist residencies at the Headlands Center for the Arts, the Macdowell Colony, SPACE on Ryder Farm, The Blue Mountain Center, and with the Cape Farewell Project. Additionally, she has participated in numerous scientific research expeditions in regions ranging from the Arctic to Central and South America. Awards include the New Jersey State Council on the Arts, The Franklin Research Fellowship/ American Philosophical Institute, The Fleishhacker Foundation and Artadia Award. She is currently on the faculty at Bard College.

www.adrianecolburn.com