Sarah Yuster's "Victory Boulevard, Dawn."

STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- It's getting to the point in artist Sarah Yuster's career where a particularly moody skyline on a Staten Island street has its own name: A "Sarah Yuster Street."

From her iconic view down Victory Boulevard of the Twin Towers to the industrial West Shore Expressway, her landscapes have documented the nuance of Staten Island as a home. The familiarity brings people together.

"I think my work makes people feel included," Yuster observed.

For anyone who seen Yuster's work and felt the deep-rooted sense of home, there's "Native Soil," an artists' talk and slideshow, at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Staten Island Museum's Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden location in Livingston. Tickets are $15 or free for museum members.

Yuster's work has been exhibited all over the world, is in the permanent collections of Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery, National Air & Space Museum, Harvard and Yale; and hangs in institutions and corporate headquarters throughout the metropolitan area.

One of her pieces currently hangs at the Staten Island Museum's upstairs exhibits, "Staten Island Seen."

Yuster also helped to create the documentary "Small Truths" about the experiences of immigrant children. Check out the trailer:

Small Truths trailer late 2014 from Michael McWeeney on Vimeo.

This weekend's talk is named after a William Faulkner quote: "I discovered that my own little postage stamp of native soil was worth writing about and that I would never live long enough to exhaust it."

It reflects the common subject matter in Yuster's work: Staten Island. Though she has been painting since she was 12-years-old, it wasn't until recently that she realized the power in these types of paintings. Her discussion will pull in the experiences other people have had with her work, she said.

"People much younger, and older, have watched my work develop and in some way it has defined their existence here," she said. "I'm not necessarily painting for them, but the fact that they're responding, saying 'that's mine too,' makes it count more."