Kandis Susol

Kandis Susol’s encaustic paper sculptures are created with Japanese Kozo pulp, wax and damar resin to reflect the flow of nature’s elements and to evoke a meditative state of mind. Below are recent features of the artist’s work in interior design magazines.

Artist Kandis Susol works out of her studio known as Jakuan (Arbor of Tranquility), located on remote Orcas Island, where she creates her encaustic paper sculptures as a form of spiritual practice. Inspired by her study of garden design in Kyoto, Japan; practicing tea ceremony at Shoseian in Seattle, Washington; her study of Zen Buddhism, and a Fiber Arts Major at the University of Washington for 2 years, she is wholeheartedly present in the moment when she works. Drawing on inspiration from the natural world, she is infusing each piece with a meditative quality and materials representing all four earthly elements: water, air, fire and earth.

The colors one perceives in each piece are not colors from dye, but the play of light and shadow as one moves position in relation to the artwork. Each work is comprised of natural elements, including iridescent pigment made from the likes of fish scales and freshwater oyster shells ground into an oil medium to uniquely reflect light, wax from bees, and organic Kozo pulp from Japan to make the translucent paper—a process that takes months to complete.

“The paper invites me to look at my imperfections so that I may find a way to see we are all similar, but unique, flawed but beautiful, a bright side and a shadow side.” —Kandis Susol

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