Sabine Kussmaul
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- instagram ,
- PhD thesis ,
- journal article: Practice-based Research and Creative Arts Practice: Intra-action, Self and the Other; Drawing and Installation in the British Peak District ,
- journal article: Drawing and installation on the British Peak District: Self, environment and a mobile working kit
I am a visual artist with a background in fashion design and illustration, based in the vicinity of Macclesfield, UK. I locate my current arts practice within the field of expanded drawing. It has developed as a response to observing, drawing and imagining the relationship between the human body and garments from my background in fashion design, and from many years of teaching drawing as an essential skill for professionals in the creative industries and for anybody interested in a creative engagement with the world.
After developing a unique method for making hand-stitched pictures by ‘drawing’ with yarn on transparent fabric, I came to question the limitations of drawing as a surface-based undertaking. The kinetic dimensions of drawing actions – moving the hand with a tool over a surface – remind me of human movement in landscape, for example running or walking in outdoor environments.
I now understand the processes of drawing as a template for human engagement with the world where we leave marks on surfaces or re-constitute three-dimensional material contexts. Such practical making occurs in the context of ‘practices’, where we hold intentions and perform techniques. Our practices of making and doing things can also be seen as our ‘inscriptions’ into the world and its environments; drawing and installation are part of such human practices.
As part of my doctoral enquiry at the University of Chester I developed a new way of outdoor artmaking in response to the environment of the British Peak District. I use paper, elements of wood, fabric and string to produce a mobile working kit (MWK) to make temporary installations outdoors and drawings. I exhibit the artefacts from outdoors as displays in indoor exhibitions, complemented by photographs and videos from the outdoor scenarios.
The practicalities of such artmaking have allowed me to reveal and critically engage with the relationship between the self and outdoor environments. Using the MWK outdoors and in indoor exhibitions visualises the deep connectivity between the human condition and the outdoor world and articulates the interdependence between artist intentions, choices of artmaking materials and environmental specificities. The MWK has developed in response to the weather, particularly wind and rain, and the topography of Bakestonedale Moor. The MWK is ‘artful equipment’ that articulates tacit knowledge, a practical and cognitive response to dealing with the challenges of being outdoors.
I understand my arts practice and its many artmaking actions as performances that occur alongside the activity of the other-than-humans in the environment. In this sense, artmaking is a form of non-verbal communication with ‘the other’.
My engagement with materials, environments and artmaking processes has made me conceive of movement as a manifestation of aliveness and expressivity in the world. This is articulated in the kinetic and rhythmic aspects of material transformations when use materials, but also when humans and animals move in their environments; movement also facilitates the production of sound.
Whilst having developed my arts practice as a solo activity I have also used the MWK in the context of group activities where several persons use it as a choreographic tool in a shared sculptural activity. I developed this practical concept together with Gemma Collard-Stokes Scott Thurston. We have offered workshops where groups used the MWK to move in and around outdoor environment, taking into consideration the particular qualities of the land and using the social interaction between the participants as the driver for such engagement.
I currently teach drawing in further education and aim to develop my arts practice further by using the MWK as a device for participatory activities that foster wellbeing and environmental awareness for individuals and groups.
I intend to continue the development and exhibition of my work and participate in the current debate about the role of visual arts, particularly of drawing, in the context of performance and the outdoor environment.
Lived Experience
I grew up in a rural area in the northern part of the Black Forest in Germany and moved to England in 1998. When I can feel a connection to the outdoors, its natural rhythms and changes (and I don’t mind the wind and rain…), I can find my place in the world, no matter where I am. I am fascinated by the abstract patterns that lie behind the world’s changes and for a while I thought I should study Maths to use its language to capture and describe how water flows in the oceans or the planets move in the sky. Then I decided that Maths was too clear and precise. Instead, engaging with art seemed the real challenge: there is emotion in it, the ephemerality of the felt moment and our hopes and dreams, all articulated in artworks and our processes of making it. I studied fashion because I found that the human figure, her movements and shapes reveal many aspects of our human condition. When you design garments, aside from the utilitarian aspect of the resulting clothes, the design process allows you to tap into the dynamics between touching and using materials and experiencing our body as a place that feels and moves. When I make drawings of the human figure I can imagine or re-live the ways in which we feel garments on our bodies and how we experience the space created between the garment’s architectural form and our skin’s surface. Drawing is more than a process to produce an image. Making marks allows me to connect what I see, feel and think to my movements with the pencil and to the emerging mark on paper. Making a drawing means to be going on a journey and producing the documentation of its unfolding. We might understand our walking in landscape as a journey that produces marks – inscribing and transforming current experience into memory and leaving behind footprints. The work on my PhD project involved that I develop an arts practice with drawing and installation in response to the landscape of Bakestonedale Moor, an area in the vicinity of Pott Shrigley, in the British Peak District. I found out how I could use paper and fabric as drawing supports and as elements for sculptural purposes. My ways of using these materials were a direct response to the wind, rain and topography of Bakestonedale Moor. How we choose and use materials and our temporal rhythms of working with them are part of the practices we have with making, doing, feeling and thinking things. I understand practices as our lasting ‘inscriptions’ into the world. We ‘perform’ our practices and they occur alongside the activities of all human and other-than-human actors. When change happens in the world, it manifests in the movement of things – materials reconstitute themselves in new natural forms, people build houses or dance, animals migrate and the string of an instrument rings out because it has been brought into movement. I like to feel myself move along with things. When I play the bass guitar then I can transfer my own physical energy into rhythm and melody. Movement is a manifestation of matter.
Aside from my arts practice I enjoy windsurfing and running outdoors and I am part of an indie-rock band called Imperial Bees.
Sabine Kussmaul
tel. 01625 820003
mobile 07941 348502
sabine@sabinekussmaul.com
I am a visual artist with a background in fashion design and illustration, with a recent PhD from developing and investigating creative practices in the outdoor world, and a teaching practice in further education.
www.sabinekussmaul.com
https://www.instagram.com/sabinekussmaulvisualartist/
| Education and qualifications | |
| August 2025 | PhD, Artmaking in the outdoor environment: negotiating experiential and material complexities, University of Chester |
| 2018 | MA Fine Art, University of Chester |
| 2001 | Postgraduate Certificate in Education, Sunderland University & Tameside College |
| 1991 - 1992 | Postgraduate studies at Pratt Institute and Fashion Institute of Technology, New York, USA |
| 1991 | Degree in fashion design (Dipl. Fashion Designer (FH) ), University Pforzheim, Germany |
| 1989 | Internship in the fashion industry with Givenchy and Jin Abe, Paris, France |
Scholarships by the German Academic Scholarship Foundation | |
| 1991-1992 | Scholarship for post-graduate studies |
| 1987-1991 | Scholarship for undergraduate studies |
| Additional qualifications | |
| 2008 | Level 2 Certificate in Learning Support, Pathway 2: Numeracy, Liverpool Community College |
| 2008 | Modelling the climate, The Open University |
| 2007 | Using Mathematics, The Open University |
| 2000 | Certificate in Health & Safety, Chartered Institute of Environmental Health |
| Teaching experience and employment | |
Teaching in Further Education
| |
| Since 2019 | The Guild for Lifelong Learning, Wilmslow |
| Since 2018 | Private workshops in fashion drawing/illustration and life-drawing |
| 2004 - 2008 | Liverpool Community College, Liverpool |
| 2001 - 2002 | Tameside College, Ashton-under-Lyne |
| 2000 | HM Prison Wakefield (Beverley College) |
| 1992 - 1998 | Balthasar-Neumann Schule II, Bruchsal, Germany |
| Teacher Training | |
| 2018 | Drawing, colour techniques, documenting the creative process, Fallibroome Academy, Macclesfield |
Teaching in Higher Education | |
| 2023 | Workshop Moving on common ground for students of BA Creative Expressive Arts, Health, and Wellbeing, University of Derby - with Gemma Collard-Stokes and Scott Thurston |
| 2022 | Tutoring MA Fine Art students, University of Chester |
| 1997 | Fashion Drawing, Pforzheim University, Germany |
Curriculum Development | |
| 1992 | Essential contribution to the development of Fashion Drawing and Illustration Curriculum, Fashion Design Assistant qualification pathway, Baden-Württemberg, Germany |
| Free-lance designer/artist | |
| Since 1998 | Commissions of wall-hung artwork for private collectors or commercial indoor environments |
| 1994 - 2016 | Illustrator for print and digital media: packaging, books, magazines, company reports and educational resources, e.g. for Medienwerkstatt Mühlacker, Germany. |
| 1992 - 1994 | Designer for sportswear and knitwear |
| Projects and collaborations | |
| Since 2021 | Our common ground, interdisciplinary collaboration on Bakestonedale Moor - with Gemma Collard-Stokes (choreoprapher) and Scott Thurston (poet/movement practitioner) |
| 2021 | Figurative drawing and yoga - with Deborah Graham (yoga therapist) |
| Musical improvisation with guitars – with Simon Ross (musician) | |
| 2015-2016 | Multi-media performances – with Mark Sheeky (multi-media artist) |
| 2014 | Ghosts in the machine, a project that explored the community of musicians in the Macclesfield area: we conducted and published interviews, produced photographic documentation of the project, produced our own original artwork, and compiled a final exhibition of all materials – with Sara MacKian (geographer/visual artist) |
| Exhibitions and public engagement | |
| Solo Exhibitions | |
| 2025 | Bakestonedale Moor: wind, weather and a mobile artmaking kit, exposition of doctoral research project, CASC in the Grosvenor Centre, Chester |
| 2022 | Unpredictable, particular, and … lots of mud, Kingsway Campus, University of Chester |
| 2022 | Outdoor arts practice: marks and artefacts, University of Chester |
| 2021 | Exhibition of artwork of current PhD studies, University of Chester |
| 2020 | Mobile working kit, charcoal on site, University of Chester |
| 2020 | Articulations, University of Chester |
| 2016 | Drawn together, Charles Roe House, Macclesfield |
| 2013 | Exhibition at Sefton Lodge, Liverpool |
| 2012 | Sabine Kussmaul, Gallery at Bank Quay House, Warrington |
| 2012 | Fragmented views, MerseyBio, Liverpool |
| 2012 | Transfigured spaces, Barnaby Festival, Macclesfield |
| 2011 | Canvas, thread and steel, The Arts Centre, Bollington |
| 1997 | Zeichnung, Restaurant Himmlisch, Rastatt, Germany |
| Participation in group exhibitions | |
| 2024 | Trails and tributaries, artists from Twentysevenb studio collective exhibit their artwork, Teggs Nose Visitor Centre, Macclesfield |
| 2023 | Studio open at Twentysevenb, Macclesfield |
| 2022 | Passage, Twentysevenb studio collective, Teggs Nose Visitor Centre, Macclesfield |
| 2021 | Studio open at Twentysevenb, Macclesfield |
| 2020 | Second Sight, online exhibition as part of Barnaby Festival, Macclesfield |
| 2020 | Nice to see you, to see you nice, CASC 2020 staff and alumni exhibition, Grosvenor Shopping Centre, Chester |
| 2019 | Ghost mills, Stroud Valleys Artspace, John Street Gallery, Stroud |
| 2019 | Incendiary: set on fire, Landsdown Gallery, Stroud |
| 2019 | This land is our land, Paper Gallery, Manchester |
| 2019 | Whisper of moths, Macclesfield Heritage Centre |
| 2018 | KINdoms, FAB Fringe Art, Bath |
| 2018 | The embodied experience of drawing, Ocean Studios, Plymouth |
| 2015 | Flashback, Espacio Gallery, London |
| 2014 | Ghosts in the machine, Barnaby Festival, Macclesfield |
| 2013 | Grosvenor Museum open exhibition 2013, Chester |
| 2013 | Warrington open contemporary art exhibition, Warrington |
| 2012 | Fabric of the land, Geology and Petroleum Geology School of Geosciences, University of Aberdeen |
| Prizes | |
| 2014 | 1st prize, Cheshire open studios 2014, Funky Aardvark, Chester |
| 2013 | 3rd prize, Grosvenor Museum open exhibition 2013, Chester |
| 2011 | Prize winner for category seasons, Warrington contemporary arts festival |
| Performances | |
| 2017 | Making up democracy, Studio Kew, London - with Mark Sheeky |
| 2016 | The iIllusion of myth, Espacio Gallery, London - with Mark Sheeky |
| 2015 | Anatomy of emotions, Contemporary arts festival, Warrington -with Mark Sheeky and Tim Watson |
| 2015 | Sonata lost and found, All Saints Church, Crewe - with Mark Sheeky and Sarah MacKian |
| Public talks | |
| 2020 | From stitched artworks to a contemporary visual arts practice, Altrincham Embroiderers’ Guild |
| 2020 | Sabine Kussmaul, visual artist, Cheshire Borders and Chester Embroiderers’ Guild, Malpas |
| 2019 | Body, feeling and environment: defining a drawing practice, Twentysevenb studio collective artist talks, Macclesfield |
| 2019 | Artist talk, Incendiary: set on fire, Landsdown Gallery, Stroud - with Simon Ross |
| 2018 | Artist talk, KINdoms, FAB Fringe Art, Bath - with Bridget Kennedy |
| 2018 | Artist talk, Dartington Hall, Totnes - with artists from KINdoms |
| Curatorial activities | |
| Since 2024 | Curation of exhibitions from learner artwork, The Guild for Lifelong Learning, Wilmslow |
| Since 2017 | Curation and organisation of artist talks, in collaboration with other members of Twentysevenb studio collective |
| 2019 | Noisewerks, curation and organisation of live performances of improvised music, Mash Guru Bar, Macclesfield - with Simon Ross |
| 2016 – 2019 | Improv Night, curation and organisation of live performances with sound, video and drama, Mash Guru Bar, Macclesfield – with Mark Sheeky |
| 2016 | Curation of Freak Show, visual arts exhibition, Mash Guru, Macclesfield - with Mark Sheeky |
| Reviews/citations | |
| 2025 | Barnaby. Painting the town, film by Mike and Danny Thorpe. |
| 2020 | Seeing differently, secondsight.barnabyfestival.org.uk |
| 2018 | Sabine Kussmaul - Artist of the month, art-earth.org.uk |
| 2017 | Marking movements, expandeddrawingpractices.blogspot.com |
| Research | |
| PhD | |
| 2025 | Artmaking in the outdoor environment: negotiating experiential and material complexities, University of Chester. A practice-based enquiry investigating how the relationship between the self and the outdoor environment might manifest in a creative practice: development of a new arts practice with drawing and installation in response to the landscape of the British Peak District and revealing the emerging dynamics between artist intentions, environment particularities and artmaking materials. |
| Publications | |
| 2024 | Drawing and installation on the British Peak District: Self, environment and a mobile working kit, Drawing: Research, Theory, Practice. Volume 9. Issue Drawing and Knowledge |
| 2022 | Practice-based research and creative arts practice: intra-action, self and the other; drawing and installation in the British Peak District. International Journal of Creative Media Research. Issue 9. |
| Presentations at conferences and symposia | |
| 2025 | Finding common ground, workshop, with Gemma Collard-Stokes and Scott Thurston, Nature Connections Conference, University of Derby |
| 2024 | Drawing on the British Peak District: intra-action, self and a mobile working kit, PG Research Symposium, University of Chester |
| 2023 | Working it out. Developing a visual arts practice as a practice-as-research approach, presentation for MA Art & Design students, University of Chester |
| 2022 | Our common ground – an interdisciplinary collaboration with the open pastures of Bakestonedale Moor, presentation with Gemma Collard-Stokes and Scott Thurston about our shared practice outdoors, Harnessing our Potential Symposium, University of Derby. |
| 2022 | Our common ground. Multi-disciplinary collaborative project. Presentation with Gemma Collard-Stokes and Scott Thurston about our shared practice outdoors, Sentient Performativities Symposium, Dartington Hall, Totnes. |
| 2022 | Practice-led research with creative arts: how do you do it? Enacting the dialogue between process and form in outdoor environments, creative practice and research, PG seminar, University of Wolverhampton. |
| 2021 | Do the clouds know that I am drawing them? And, does this question matter?, PG symposium, University of Chester. |
| 2021 | How can a temporary installation practice negotiate the relationships between self and natural outdoor environments?, Conference of Irish Geographers, Trinity College Dublin |
| 2021 | How can a new materialist concept of interaction between materials provide structure for creative artmaking and practice-as-research?, PG symposium, University of Chester |
| 2021 | How can embodied drawing practices negotiate the relationships between self and natural outdoor environments?, PG symposium, Department of Drama and Theatre Arts, University of Birmingham |
| 2020 | Drawing environments, feeling space, Beyond, online conference |
| 2020 | Embodied drawing practices and the relationships between self and environments: improvisation and two ways of performative writing, PG symposium, University of Chester |
2019
| Feeling space: Investigating relationships between self, body and environment?, CA2RE: conference for artistic and architectural research, KU Leuven, Ghent, Belgium |
| 2019 | How does the relationship between the motility of vision and the motility of the body impact on the way we draw?, PG symposium, University of Chester |
| 2017 | Moving Lines, screening of my video, In Other Tongues Symposium, Dartington Hall, Totnes |
Avenues of practice-based enquiry As a practice-based researcher, I use drawing, installation and engaging with materials to explore what appears unfamiliar or what tickles my curiosity in the context of ‘not knowing things’. I believe that maintaining a continuous flow of work paired with reflective practice methods will always produce conceptual frameworks and practical making strategies. I am interested to explore the space around us, find out how other beings contribute to its formation and establish the role that my artmaking plays within such processes. Dimensions of embodiment and the complexity and vulnerability of environments are particular concerns within these interests. I understand the aliveness and vitality of the world from a new materialist viewpoint where artmaking materials and the environment have agency that impacts on the ways in which we experience the world. My current research interests fall into several avenues of enquiry:
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