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Zaria Forman
Zaria Forman
01:31

Zaria Forman

New York, NY USA

"I'm trying to encourage people with positivity and hope. If you fall in love with something, you want to protect it."

Career Roadmap

Zaria's work combines: Art, Environment & Nature, and Being Creative

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Day In The Life

Artist & Climate Change Activist

I am an artist focused on creating large scale landscapes that convey the urgency of climate change.

My Day to Day

I consider it my life’s mission to convey the urgency of climate change through my work. I have traveled north to the Arctic to capture the unfolding story of polar melt, and south to the Equator to document subsequent rising seas. On these trips, I take a lot of photographs and get inspiration. I use these images as guides. On a large canvas, I grid out sections that correspond to parts of the photo and then begin painting using pastels.

Skills & Education

Advice for getting started

Using pastels, as I do, is a tricky medium and white is a very hard color to use and manipulate. Early on, I was omitting the ice from my work and only focusing on the sea and sky. Eventually, I realized that if I wanted to focus my work on climate change and solving this issue, I had to get out of my comfort zone and challenge myself to paint ice.

Here's the path I took:

  • High School

  • Bachelor's Degree

    Fine/Studio Arts, General

    Skidmore College

Life & Career Milestones

I've taken a lot of twists and turns

  • 1.

    Her mother was a landscape photographer, and each summer, they’d spend one month traveling.

  • 2.

    Her mom taught her artistic principles that Zaria still uses today, like how to set up a shot with an interesting composition, and how to follow and best make use of the light.

  • 3.

    Years before climate change had become a huge topic of discussion, her family traveled to Greenland, where they got to see the effects of global warming up close.

  • 4.

    She realized that she wanted to focus her work on amplifying people’s understanding of these issues.

  • 5.

    She and her mother started planning a second excursion to Greenland, but before they could make the trip, her mom was diagnosed with brain cancer and passed away six months later.

  • 6.

    She decided to follow through on her mother’s vision, and took the trip to Greenland with a group of artists and scientists.

  • 7.

    After that journey, she started making the giant pastel drawings of ice that she’s become well-known for.

  • 8.

    Believes that when people read about climate change, they have a hard time empathizing, but when they see it depicted in her large-scale paintings, they’re more moved and inspired to act.

Defining Moments

How I responded to discouragement

  • THE NOISE

    Messages from Myself:

    I don't think I can draw ice. This seems impossible.

  • How I responded:

    Using pastels, as I do, is a tricky medium and white is a very hard color to use and manipulate. Early on, I was omitting the ice from my work and only focusing on the sea and sky. Eventually, I realized that if I wanted to focus my work on climate change and solving this issue, I had to get out of my comfort zone and challenge myself to paint ice.

Experiences and challenges that shaped me

Click to expand

  • A few years ago my mom was diagnosed with brain cancer and died very quickly afterwards which was a shock, but my art gave me something to pour my grief into.

  • I keep wanting to make bigger and bigger art, but I'm limited by space, it's really expensive, and it is very difficult to work with soft pastels on that scale.