Katy Cowan

suns fall

Katy Cowan, Wisconsin-born artist based in Berlin, earned her BFA and MFA in Studio Art in Washington and California respectively. After her studies, she returned to Wisconsin to teach at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design and Mount Mary University. During her time in the West Coast, Cowan adopted an openness to her art practice, embracing accidents, blurring the boundaries of painting and sculpture, utilizing everyday objects, and responding to the constantly changing environments around her. Recently, Cowan brought her practice into the public realm, with an outdoor exhibition at the Lynden Sculpture Garden in 2017, in which she described her work as a gentle intrusion onto the already existing landscape.

Cowans work on view for Sculpture Milwaukee, suns fall, transforms common studio objects of 2 x 4 planks and rope into cast metal that are painted with oil and enamel, and drawn upon with graphite. The objects stand in an upright position that is reminiscent of various associations sundials used by ancient civilizations to keep track of time, the ebb and flow of ocean tides, and the everyday objects of the sculptures construction. Cowan often works to push common objects into new terrains of associations for her viewers. With suns fall, rather than having her objects cast a shadow to tell time or replicate one moment in a fluxing landscape, Cowan composes and builds marks and colors deliberately on the surface to demonstrate how the passage of time transforms our perspective of the natural landscape and the way one interacts with the world around them.

Katy Cowan, Wisconsin-born artist based in Berlin, earned her BFA and MFA in Studio Art in Washington and California respectively. After her studies, she returned to Wisconsin to teach at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design and Mount Mary University. During her time in the West Coast, Cowan adopted an openness to her art practice, embracing accidents, blurring the boundaries of painting and sculpture, utilizing everyday objects, and responding to the constantly changing environments around her. Recently, Cowan brought her practice into the public realm, with an outdoor exhibition at the Lynden Sculpture Garden in 2017, in which she described her work as a gentle intrusion onto the already existing landscape.

Cowans work on view for Sculpture Milwaukee, suns fall, transforms common studio objects of 2 x 4 planks and rope into cast metal that are painted with oil and enamel, and drawn upon with graphite. The objects stand in an upright position that is reminiscent of various associations sundials used by ancient civilizations to keep track of time, the ebb and flow of ocean tides, and the everyday objects of the sculptures construction. Cowan often works to push common objects into new terrains of associations for her viewers. With suns fall, rather than having her objects cast a shadow to tell time or replicate one moment in a fluxing landscape, Cowan composes and builds marks and colors deliberately on the surface to demonstrate how the passage of time transforms our perspective of the natural landscape and the way one interacts with the world around them.

Katy Cowan, Wisconsin-born artist based in Berlin, earned her BFA and MFA in Studio Art in Washington and California respectively. After her studies, she returned to Wisconsin to teach at the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design and Mount Mary University. During her time in the West Coast, Cowan adopted an openness to her art practice, embracing accidents, blurring the boundaries of painting and sculpture, utilizing everyday objects, and responding to the constantly changing environments around her. Recently, Cowan brought her practice into the public realm, with an outdoor exhibition at the Lynden Sculpture Garden in 2017, in which she described her work as a gentle intrusion onto the already existing landscape.

Cowans work on view for Sculpture Milwaukee, suns fall, transforms common studio objects of 2 x 4 planks and rope into cast metal that are painted with oil and enamel, and drawn upon with graphite. The objects stand in an upright position that is reminiscent of various associations sundials used by ancient civilizations to keep track of time, the ebb and flow of ocean tides, and the everyday objects of the sculptures construction. Cowan often works to push common objects into new terrains of associations for her viewers. With suns fall, rather than having her objects cast a shadow to tell time or replicate one moment in a fluxing landscape, Cowan composes and builds marks and colors deliberately on the surface to demonstrate how the passage of time transforms our perspective of the natural landscape and the way one interacts with the world around them.

Katy Cowan

Katy Cowan

suns fall

Exhibition

Exhibition

Materials & Dimensions

Materials & Dimensions

Oil and enamel paint, graphite on cast aluminum

76 x 55 x 23 inches

Year

Year

2021

Site

Site

Credits

Credits

Courtesy of the artist and Phillip Martin Gallery, Los Angeles.

Audio Tour

Audio Tour

0:00/1:34

Lois Weinberger

Mobile Garden

Lois Weinberger

Mobile Garden

Lois Weinberger

Mobile Garden

Lars Fisk

Tudor Ball

Lars Fisk

Tudor Ball

Lars Fisk

Tudor Ball

Pao Houa Her

Untitled

Pao Houa Her

Untitled

Pao Houa Her

Untitled

thank you

To our generous sponsors, partners, collaborators, and supporters who make our work possible.

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Sponsors

* indicates both Founding and sustaining founding sponsor

Anonymous
Donna & Donald Baumgartner*
Black Box Fund
Evan & Marion Helfaer Foundation
Susan & Mark Irgens*
Mellowes Family*
Sue & Bud Selig*
Julie & David Uihlein*
Lacey Sadoff Foundation

presenting

Collaborator

Betty Arndt
City of Milwaukee Arts Board
Good Karma Brands

leader

Anonymous
Heil Family Foundation
Godfrey & Kahn

Exhibition Partner

Visionary

George & Karen Oliver

sculpture

Wayne & Lori Morgan

Connector

BMO
Foley & Lardner
Hawks Landscaping
Open Pantry
PNC Bank
PwC
Russ Darrow Group
Town Bank
US Bank
WeycoGroup

Sculpture Milwaukee is always free and open to the public thanks to our generous supporters.

We work with trusted community partners to ensure great contemporary art is accessible to all.

Colophon

© 2025 Sculpture Milwaukee

thank you

To our generous sponsors, partners, collaborators, and supporters who make our work possible.

Founding & Sustaining
Sponsors

* indicates both Founding and sustaining founding sponsor

Anonymous
Donna & Donald Baumgartner*
Black Box Fund
Evan & Marion Helfaer Foundation
Herb Kohl Philanthropies
Herzfeld Foundation
Hoke Family Foundation
Susan & Mark Irgens*
Mandel Groups*
Mellowes Family*
Sue & Bud Selig*
Julie & David Uihlein*
Lacey Sadoff Foundation

presenting

Collaborator

Betty Arndt
City of Milwaukee Arts Board
Good Karma Brands

leader

Anonymous
Heil Family Foundation
Godfrey & Kahn

Exhibition Partner

Visionary

Evan & Marion Helfaer Foundation

sculpture

Wayne & Lori Morgan

Connector

BMO
Foley & Lardner
Hawks Landscaping
Open Pantry
PNC Bank
PwC
Russ Darrow Group
Town Bank
US Bank
WeycoGroup

Sculpture Milwaukee is always free and open to the public thanks to our generous supporters.

We work with trusted community partners to ensure great contemporary art is accessible to all.

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Colophon

© 2025 Sculpture Milwaukee