About Liz

Baltimore City
LIZ ENSZ was born in Minnesota to a resourceful family of penny-savers, metal scrappers, and curators of cast-offs. Liz received a BFA in Fiber from the Maryland Institute College of Art (2005), and an MFA in Fiber and Material Studies from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago (2013). With an interdisciplinary approach, their work presents a comparative study of the mass-cultural investment in disposability and the human desire to imagine permanence through emblems, monuments, and… more

ANTHROPOCENE MONUMENTS

ARTIST STATEMENT

My research examines the designed and found icons of the American character in search of our underlying values and our aspirations as individuals and as a society. These ideals are visible as monumental forms, but also camouflaged in mundane ubiquity. Themes within the work- the economic flows of resources, moral and material conundrums, and the legacy of empire- are touchstones that constellate to destabilize and complicate what may have been seen as our foundational ideals.

I present a comparative study of the mass-cultural investment in disposability and the human desire to imagine permanence through emblems, monuments, and self-celebration. While disparate intentions inform these impulses- one to remember, and the other to quickly forget- each will materially describe our society to future generations. Through this lens, I explore the complexities of the American landscape, human-scale and geological-scale time and space, and the ways in which the constructed environment rivals that of the natural environment. Our physical material footprint will outlive the emblems designed to signify our political and moral ideals to stand as our lasting cultural monument and define the Contemporary American Sublime.

My sculptural and installation works borrow from the visual language of memorial and commemoration in textiles and metals. These Anthropocene-Era Commemoratives contrast human-scale and geological-scale time and space as part of the continual unfolding and cycling of matter and the transformation of landscape. My installations are arranged differently each time they are installed, often integrating locally sourced found materials. This contemplative combination of materials becomes existential, questioning the solidity and permanence of both nature and culture, and implicating the local community in a global conversation about materials.


  • With God on Our Side (ynitseD tsefinaM)
    With God on Our Side (ynitseD tsefinaM)
    2017, cast brass, patina, steel stand, custom hardware, 14" x 20" x 68" created at Kohler Arts/Industry
  • With God on Our Side (reverse)
    With God on Our Side (reverse)
    2017, cast brass, patina, steel stand, custom hardware, 14" x 20" x 68" created at Kohler Arts/Industry
  • Esto Perpetua
    Esto Perpetua
    2013, cast iron, stone, 20" x 26" x 38"
  • HELA Monument Proposal
    HELA Monument Proposal
    2015-2017, proposal sent to the Mayor of Baltimore addressing public Confederate Monuments, 8.5" x 11"
  • Your Payment is Immaterial
    Your Payment is Immaterial
    2016, cast bronze, patina, steel stand, custom hardware, 13" x 20" x .5" each plaque (3 plaques)
  • Remember the Future / Forget the Past
    Remember the Future / Forget the Past
    2016, cast aluminum, cast iron spikes, each plaque 13" x 19" x .75"
  • The Pursuit of Happiness
    The Pursuit of Happiness
    2017, cast brass, patina, steel stand, custom hardware, 14" x 24" x 68" created at Kohler Arts/Industry
  • The Pursuit of Happiness (detail)
    The Pursuit of Happiness (detail)
    2017, cast brass, patina, steel stand, custom hardware, 14" x 24" x 68" created at Kohler Arts/Industry
  • Novus Ordo Seclorum
    Novus Ordo Seclorum
    2017, cast brass, patina, steel stand, custom hardware, 22" x 32" x 44" created at Kohler Arts/Industry
  • Indicator of Abundance
    Indicator of Abundance
    2013, cast iron, 13" x 17" x 20"