Shuli Sadé's cross-disciplinary artwork blends theory and practice with a focus on memory, space, and urbanism. Her work creates maps of urban memory, reflecting the DNA of a city. In recent years she created several public art installations in reference to the environment and the Hudson River. She mixes mediums including photography, videography, augmented reality, site-specific installations, sculpture, and drawing. She lives in NYC and works at her studio at Mana Contemporary in Jersey City, NJ. Sadé creates site-specific public art and murals in Health care institutions as well as the Corporate environment, permanently installed in Manhattan, Philadelphia, Boston, North Carolina, New Jersey, and others. Currently, she won a competition to create a glass mural at a newly built City Hall in Huntsville, Al.Sadé is a recipient of the Pollock Krasner Foundation Grant, (2014), the National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship (1991), and others. She has taught and lectured at the University of Pennsylvania School of Architecture, Parsons School of Design, Columbia University, Barnard College, and Bezalel Academy of Art and Design School. She received her Bachelor of Fine Arts from Bezalel Academy of Art and Design in Israel and continued her studies at the School of Visual Arts in NYC. Her work is in the collection of Mead Museum, Amherst, The Israel Museum, Jerusalem, and the Haifa Museum, Israel, and in numerous public and private collections including Pfizer Corporate Art Collection, Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center, NH, and Duke Energy Headquarters in Charlotte NC and others.
Listed skills include Art, Photography, Fine Art, Digital Photography, and 31 others.