Work samples

  • What To Do?
    What To Do?
    12" x 9" pencil on paper. This is one drawing shown in daylight and in UV light. It is not a diptych.
  • Say When
    Say When
    12" x 9" pencil on paper. This is one drawing shown in daylight and in UV light. It is not a diptych.
  • Where Are We To Go?
    Where Are We To Go?
    12" x 9" pencil on paper. This is one drawing shown in daylight and in UV light. It is not a diptych.
  • What Have We?
    What Have We?
    12" x 9" pencil on paper. This is one drawing shown in daylight and in UV light. It is not a diptych.

About Sarah

Baltimore City - Station North A&E District

Sarah Clough is a visual artist, writer, teacher, and curator living in Baltimore. While a graduate student at the Maryland Institute College of Art, Clough was awarded a GradEX solo show and her paintings were also featured in the annual First Year Juried Show. She has exhibited across the United States and in South Korea. She is a Denis Diderot Grant recipient from the Chateau d'Orquevaux Residency in Orquevaux, France, and an… more

Holographic Glowing Visual Poems

Time rewards the curious in these intricate and interactive drawings. Immersive yet intimate in scale, these pencil on paper works are meant to be seen in both daylight and in the dark through provided UV flashlights. Using light as a medium, viewers control what is unearthed, what remains buried or unexamined. Though they are unmoored from a single, fixed meaning, when read sequentially, poetry emerges. Fore and ground reverse, and the standard two dimensions of drawing open up to illuminate unexpected spaces within.

These drawings are inspired by physics and bear the influences of light and optical art, and they are reminiscent of woven textile works. Some drawings are balanced and rigid, holding moire patterns within multiple layers; others are witness to an unraveling from within. Thin vertical lines girding the works from underneath set up the lenticular blurring and blending that plays on the surface. 

Rooted in graphology and semiotics, these experiential works stem from my own writing and demonstrate the subjectivity of perception, the impossibility of a shared and common vision. Most importantly, however, these playful works award attention with holographic effects that flicker and dance in daylight, speaking to language’s innate musicality, its mystery, its flexibility, its poetry and its joy.

 

  • Oh My Heart #5
    Oh My Heart #5

    colored pencil, ink, on paper 18" x 24" 

    This is not a diptych, is it shown in daylight and in the dark exposed to UV light

  • I'll Try
    I'll Try

    colored pencil, ink on paper, 9" x 12" 

    This is not a diptych, is it shown in daylight, exposed to UV light, and in the dark

     

  • What Is It We Have?
    What Is It We Have?

    colored pencil, ink on paper, 12" x 9" 

    This is not a diptych, is it shown in daylight and in the dark exposed to UV light

  • Believe In Me
    Believe In Me

    colored pencil, ink on paper, 12" x 16" 

    This is not a diptych, is it shown in daylight and in the dark exposed to UV light

  • Are You There?
    Are You There?

    colored pencil, ink on paper, 12" x 9" 

    This is not a diptych, is it shown in daylight and in the dark exposed to UV light

  • How Long Does It Shine?
    How Long Does It Shine?

    colored pencil, ink on paper, 11" x 8.5" 

    This is not a diptych, is it shown in daylight and in the dark exposed to UV light

  • Yes!
    Yes!

    colored pencil, ink on paper, 8.5" x 8.5" 

    This is not a diptych, is it shown in daylight and in the dark exposed to UV light

     

  • I Wanted This
    I Wanted This

    colored pencil, ink on paper, 11" x 8.5" 

    This is not a diptych, is it shown in daylight and in the dark exposed to UV light

Poetry

These poems were written in tandem with Dear Friend and the Holographic Visual Poems. They are the source of the texts found in those works. 

  • These Snowflakes Unsettlingly Gather Mass
    These Snowflakes Unsettlingly Gather Mass
  • Sabbath
    Sabbath
  • A Celebration
    A Celebration

Dear Friend

Dear Friend is ongoing series of works on postcards that began in 2019 and continued through the global pandemic of 2020. Many in this series were mailed through the US Postal Service with personal correspondence written on the back of the artworks. They are about the uncanny experience of sensing presences who are no longer there. They represent our desire to nurture connection through unspoken bonds and communication methods, using non-linguistic signs found in nature such as color, light and texture.

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    6" x 4" plaster on watercolor paper

  • Wait
    Wait

    6" x 4" encaustic and ink on watercolor paper

  • I Know We Do
    I Know We Do

    4" x 6" graphite and ink on watercolor paper

  • I Received Your Reply In A Dream
    I Received Your Reply In A Dream

    4" x 6" graphite and ink on watercolor paper

  • Lillies 1
    Lillies 1

    6" x 4" watercolor and colored pencil on watercolor paper

  • I Wait 2
    I Wait 2

    6" x 4" watercolor and colored pencil on watercolor paper

  • Lillies 2
    Lillies 2

    6" x 4" watercolor, colored pencil, and ink on watercolor paper

  • I Miss You
    I Miss You

    6" x 4" encaustic, mixed media on watercolor paper

  • The First Cold Drift
    The First Cold Drift

    6" x 4" encaustic, mixed media on watercolor paper

  • Green Encaustic
    Green Encaustic

    6" x 4" acrylic and encaustic on panel

Some People Can't Be Bothered

Maryland Institute College of Art, Fox Building, Baltimore, MD    

June 23 -  July 10, 2017

This installtion immersed viewers in distorted glowing language taken from my writing. Viewers illuminated the work with provided UV flashlights and were invited to write responses on the wall in luminescent ink. The text remained glowing on the wall some time after the UV light was removed. Then, viewers were returned to darkness.

My installations are like spelunking into a verbal cavern, where the glowing and fading forms and texts alternately reveal themselves or remain hidden. The form the text assumes responds to the content of the phrase; sometimes it’s measured and precise, sometimes it’s scrawled and imperfect. Meant to be seen in sunlight, ultraviolet light and in the dark, viewers control their experience: what is illuminated, what is unearthed, or what remains buried or unexamined. These experiential drawings, paintings, murals and installations demonstrate the subjectivity of perception and the deficiencies of language – its potential for vacuity, arbitrariness, and incomprehensibility. More importantly, this work also addresses language’s innate musicality, its flexibility, and its joy. Inspired by physics, chemistry, and biology, my work connects visual art with language and science, illuminating an interplay of semiotics, poetry, light, and the connections between them. It is at this intersection where I find meaning in this world governed by light and communicative processes.

  • Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    acrylic on wall and panel
  • Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    acrylic on wall and panel
  • Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    acrylic on wall and panel in UV light
  • Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    acrylic on wall and panel in UV light
  • Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    acrylic on wall and panel in UV light
  • Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    Some People Can't Be Bothered Installation
    acrylic on wall and panel in UV light
  • Project statement

Light & Dark: Glowing Paintings

  • Maybe
    Maybe

    acrylic on panel, 24" x 36"

    Shown in daylight, UV light, and in the dark

  • A Promise
    A Promise

    acrylic on panel, 4' x 10'

    Shown in daylight and in UV light

  • Sugar Tits
    Sugar Tits

    acrylic on yupo, 5' x 12'

    Shown in daylight, UV light, and in the dark

  • When?
    When?

    acrylic on panel, 24" x 36"

    Shown in daylight, UV light, and in the dark

  • The Integrity of Disbelief
    The Integrity of Disbelief

    acrylic on panel, 24" x 36"

    Shown in daylight and UV light

  • What Is This?
    What Is This?

    acrylic on panel, 36" x 36" 

    Shown in daylight and UV light

  • I'll Pass
    I'll Pass

    acrylic on panel, 10" x 8"

    Shown in daylight and UV light

  • For What?
    For What?

    acrylic on panel, 10" x 8"

    Shown in daylight and UV light

  • It's Getting Worse
    It's Getting Worse

    acrylic on panel, 20" x 20"

    Shown in daylight and UV light

  • Infinity 3
    Infinity 3

    acrylic on panel, approximately 3' x 4' 

    Shown in UV light and daylight

Shidd Art/Trash Tapestries of Recycled Cardboard

These pieces are a response to the dearth of the natural and the abundance of waste. They are a product of excess and consumerism, beginning as links in the chain of mass consumption. As discarded cardboard, they come from violent origins, created by cutting, ripping, tearing, punching and stomping. These aren’t made from traditional tools of fine art, rather the utilitarian tools of both the laborer and the mischievous petty criminal. I believe these are both paintings and sculptures, trash and art. The eery forms acknowledge their humble beginnings but are ultimately and intentionally removed from them, expressing a desire to escape the ubiquitous trash of the city. I worry my city’s most lovely parks and gardens exist primarily for those of privilege and their pooping dogs. Our society offers up an infinite amount of ways to spend money, to accumulate cheap artifice. Can beauty come from shit?

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 5' x 6'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 3' x 4'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 4' x 6" x 5'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 3' x 4'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 7' x 4'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 5' x 6'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, both 9' x 2.5'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 8' x 4'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 4' x 5'

  • Untitled
    Untitled

    spray paint on repurposed cardboard, 4' x 6" x 5'