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American Scholar

The Twilight Self

Next Image Title

Artist Name

Embracing mutability in a world gone mad means understanding how fantasy took hold of American psychiatry. A story by Philip Alcabes. AD: David Herbick

Susie Ang

Susie Ang

Represented by

IllustrationZone

illustration of Families and funeral directors are using AI obituary generators to more efficiently memorialize the dead. What happens when they get it wrong? A story by Drew Harwell. 

Client: The Washington Post | AD: Elena Lacey
illustration of A personal work in response to Neil Gaiman’s The Truth is a Cave in the Black Mountains.
illustration of Embracing mutability in a world gone mad means understanding how fantasy took hold of American psychiatry. A story by Philip Alcabes.

Client: American Scholar | AD: David Herbick
illustration of This is a piece to portray the unaccompanied minors, especially children trying to reach the US-Mexico border. It’s understood that the number has decreased but still, it’s an issue not to be overlooked.
illustration of For humanity’s fight against climate change to gain real momentum, we need to find the selfless courage that comes when our time is inevitably nigh. A essay by Pamela Swanigan.

Client: NOEMA Magazine | AD: Amara Higuera
illustration of Low fertility rates have sparked panic and pronatalist initiatives around the world. But some experts are more concerned about the ethics of pushing for more births. A report by Kelsey Ables.

Client; The Washington Post | AD: Elena Lacey
illustration of Firefighters carry heavy packs along rugged slopes to calm fast-moving fires, and sweltering weather is compounding already dangerous work. A climate report by Gabrielle Canon.

Client: The Guardian US | AD: Rita Liu
illustration of Adam Haslett’s new novel follows an immigration lawyer whose work distracts him from the pain of loneliness. A book review by Ron Charles.

Client: The Washington Post | AD: Beth Broadwater
illustration of Even after resolving other safety concerns, parents in Georgia can wait for months to be reunited with their children, often because of what advocates say are stringent requirements sought by the state’s Division of Family and Children Services. A report by Stephanie Stokes. 

Client: Propublica | AD: Peter DiCampo.
illustration of Personal work done in 2025.

Profile

Susie Ang is an illustrator with an architectural background currently based in Singapore. Her work focuses on storytelling, combining conceptual and intuitive processes. Her approach tends to a painterly style with unfinished rough looks, along with solid compositions, emotional color palettes and tonal values. Since her starting out in 2021, she has worked with clients including The Guardian, The Washington Post, The New Yorker, ProPublica, The Fuller Project, Noema Magazine, and some others. Her works have been recognized by Communication Arts, 3X3, American Illustration, and Creative Quarterly.

Style/Techniques

Conceptual, Figurative, Fine Art, Painterly, Storyboards, Stylized, Texture, Concept Art

Subject/Specialties

Adventure, Book Covers, Children, Editorial, Family, Futuristic, Health, Landscape, Mystery, Nature, People, Portrait, Environmental