Suzanne Csikos-Nagy (Suzanne C. Nagy) is an American film producer, environmental artist, and curator who lives and works in New York City. Her work has been widely exhibited internationally, including The National Museum in Poznan, Ludwig Museum Budapest, Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art, Palazzo...
Read More
Suzanne Csikos-Nagy (Suzanne C. Nagy) is an American film producer, environmental artist, and curator who lives and works in New York City. Her work has been widely exhibited internationally, including The National Museum in Poznan, Ludwig Museum Budapest, Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art, Palazzo Guicciardini Bongianni, Art Avenue, New York University, Osprey Foundation Florida, and other institutions.
Born in Hungary to a Hungarian father, Dr. Csikós Nagy Béla, a reformed economist, a professor and was State Secretary of the Institute of Price and Material, and to a Swiss mother, Suzanne spent her childhood in Budapest. She moved to the United States in 1978. She has a bachelor’s degree in Economics from Budapest University. She specialized in international trade and law. She was a student of professor Istvan Nemeskürty and received a diploma in 1977 as a filmmaker, a film producer, and a film writer. She also studied art at the Art Students League of New York between 1980-1982.
She produced the film Grizzly II: Revenge (also known as Grizzly II: The Concert) in Hungary in 1983. She worked with talents such as George Clooney, Laura Dern, Louis Fletcher, and Charlie Sheen as a movie producer. The film was not finished until 2020, when she entered into a distribution agreement with Gravitas Venture International.
Suzanne C. Nagy is curating fine art and European art in New York and Europe.
Her mission as an environmental artist is the most important for her, especially to promote the danger humanity faces in this turbulent time. Art is a weapon with a force of power that influences us; therefore, her mission is the most serious commitment she wants to keep for the rest of her life.
Nagy is already internationally acclaimed as one of the first environmental artists who questioned how unchecked pollution threatens our water, soil, and air quality. Her works mix traditional art and technology. They stand as poetic contemplations about the environmental consequences of the industry.
Presently art and gallery relationships are the most important for her. She wants to improve her dialogs with collectors and potential buyers because her style and message entered a different phase by developing a unique language; she is ready to be part of a larger art scene.