Matthew Cusick
Matthew Cusick was born in New York City in 1970 and graduated from The Cooper Union with a BFA in 1993. His work has been exhibited internationally since 1996, including New York City gallery shows at Andrew Kreps, Kent, and Pavel Zoubok. Cusick was the recipient of a NYFA painting fellowship in 2006 and The Bemis Center for Contemporary Art residency fellowship in 2008. He has been a visiting artist and lecturer at The Cooper Union and at University of Nevada, Las Vegas. His work is held in numerous public and private collections including the San Diego Museum of Contemporary Art and the Progressive Art Collection.
Cusick lets his work be guided by his various materials: maps, atlases, encyclopedias and school textbooks. “I like to catalog, archive, and arrange information and then dismantle, manipulate, and reconfigure it. I use maps as a surrogate for paint and as a way to expand the limits of representational painting. Through a process of cutting up and reassembling fragments of maps from different places and times, I am attempting a more complete representation of an existence, one that incorporates the geographical and historical timelines of that existence within the matrix of its image.” new york-based matt cusick has made a name for himself as a fine artist due to his elaborate depictions of humans and other animals, water and landforms crafted entirely from recycled maps. to develop these collage pieces, he meticulously slices segments of antiquated cartographic works including those of old encyclopedias, textbooks, roadmaps, and atlases in order to layer small clippings into lively, familiar forms. most of cusick's collages is made colorful by the shades map makers choice to employ in their interpretations of the earth's surface. it is through past cartographers representations of surface depth, shape and plant-life portrayed in these individuals use of contour lines, darkening, and a vast color palate depicting the planet's landscapes as the range includes pigments ranging from oceans to rainforests to deserts. cusick provides his depictions with a rich, tactile quality sometimes enhancing his works with acrylic paint or home-crafted walnut ink in order to complement his map-formed figures with additional shading. |