Jackson, who was born in 1944 in St. Louis, Missouri, but grew up in San Francisco and Fairbanks, Alaska, has worked across drawing and painting, poetry, dance and theatre, to explore a strong and often spiritual connection between people and the natural world. With a fluid and poetic painting style, Suzanne has responded to the many different natural and social environments in which she has lived in the US, from San Francisco and Los Angeles, to Fairbanks, Alaska and Savannah, Georgia, to forge a distinctive take on the world and the communities that inhabit it. She taps into a broad range of artistic languages, including Native American and African American traditions, and exhibits a deep sensitivity to history and ecology while reflecting profoundly on her personal lived experience.
Suzanne Jackson, Grandparents, 1970
David Kaminsky
She has also been a gallery owner and public art administrator, with a keen sense of the role art can play in uniting and inspiring communities. Today, she makes installations formed by painted and sculptural forms that hang in the exhibition space, directly addressing subjects including the climate catastrophe.

Suzanne Jackson, Crossing Ebenezer, 2017
Timothy Doyon
She discusses the important moment where she first encountered the work of Barbara Chase Riboud, a profound encounter with Elizabeth Catlett and her admiration for Torkwase Dyson. She talks of her passion for the cartoons Archy and Mehitabel and Krazy Kat, and her love of Mississippi Delta Blues and jazz or as she calls it, African American classical music. Plus she gives insight into her life in the studio and answer our usual questions, including the ultimate, “what is art for?”
- Suzanne Jackson: What is Love, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, until 1 March 2026; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, 14 May-23 August 2026; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 26 September 2026-7 February 2027
This podcast is sponsored by Bloomberg Connects, the arts and culture platform. Bloomberg Connects offers access to a vast range of international cultural organisations through a single click, with new guides being added regularly. They include a number of museums that have had major presentations of Suzanne Jackson’s work, including all three venues for her survey show, What is Love, taking place between 2025 and 2027: the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston. The guide to the Museum of Fine Arts features a wealth of audio features, including MFA in an Hour, a Highlights Tour, with 10 works of art in the museum’s collection from an ancient Greek Head of Aphrodite and a Chinese 12th-century Jin dynasty sculpture of Guanyin, a bodhisattva, to paintings by JMW Turner and Claude Monet. You can also focus more deeply on particular holdings, with Explore the Collection features, including a Latin and Latinx Artists Tour, an Art by Women tour, and Art and Jazz tour.