The Language of Emotion in Color and Form
Susan Carr creates art from a place of emotional openness, transforming deeply personal experiences into paintings and sculptures that feel both intimate and universal. Living and working on Cape Cod in Massachusetts, she describes her basement studio as a lifelong residency shaped by the surrounding Atlantic landscape, quiet roads, and contemplative atmosphere. That environment has become inseparable from her creative process. Every day revolves around making, whether through painting, drawing, or sculpture. Carr approaches artistic practice not simply as production but as a continuous act of reflection, meditation, and emotional release. Her work carries the accumulated weight of memory, spirituality, motherhood, grief, feminism, and resilience, all filtered through a vivid visual vocabulary that feels instinctive rather than calculated. The resulting imagery possesses a remarkable sincerity, allowing viewers to sense both vulnerability and strength within each composition.
Her path toward becoming an artist began early. Carr attended a local artist guild at the age of five and recognized almost immediately that creative work would define her life. Years later, she earned an MFA from The School of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston at Tufts University in 2003 while balancing the demands of motherhood and an exhausting commute. Those years shaped her understanding of perseverance and commitment. Maintaining family responsibilities while pursuing an artistic career demanded patience, discipline, and belief in long term growth. Carr often speaks about the influence of her children, describing them as sources of love, balance, and emotional grounding. The loss of her middle son ten years ago profoundly altered her emotional landscape, yet his presence continues to move through her paintings. References to eyes, skulls, and recurring symbolic forms carry traces of remembrance and personal mythology, while paintings of her granddaughter preserve tenderness alongside grief.
The emotional texture of Carr’s work is intensified by her highly tactile surfaces and fearless use of color. Thick impasto transforms paint into physical matter, creating surfaces that feel almost sculptural. Saturated pinks, electric greens, bruised purples, acidic yellows, and deep reds collide with deliberate intensity, producing images that oscillate between celebration and unease. Her figures are flattened, elongated, and mask-like, often confronting the viewer with enlarged eyes that suggest contemplation, mystical awareness, or emotional exhaustion. Decorative elements such as cakes, butterflies, flowers, and patterned backgrounds become symbolic carriers of memory and identity rather than ornamental accessories. Carr creates visual allegories that resemble fragments of dreams, medieval icons, folk rituals, and tarot imagery. Every object appears charged with psychological meaning, contributing to compositions that feel ceremonial, emotionally raw, and spiritually resonant.
