Beginning with meticulously rendered paintings of fantastical sculptural constructions, the artist has deployed a range of pictorial techniques to depict bodies under duress. The figures in her work are compressed by their environments, stretched and twisted across armatures, and often overwhelmed by their surroundings. Some are irradiated by industrial light, sutured into uncomfortable hybrids, and hollowed out. Drawing inspiration from the distorted bodies that litter the histories of modern painting, Braunig adapts these legacies to the discomforts and instabilities of contemporary life. In more recent works, her figures seem to turn on themselves, testing their own limits and those of the settings that confine them. While evocatively dystopic, her paintings also subtly empower their vulnerable subjects, advocating a humanist art for an age in which individual experience seems threatened by forces beyond our control.
Sascha Braunig (Qualicum Beach, BC, Canada, 1983) currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. She holds a BFA from The Cooper Union, New York, and an MFA in painting from Yale University.


oil on linen over panel, 42 3⁄4 × 19 in. (108.59 × 48.26 cm) Photo: Mark Woods, courtesy Foxy Production, New York

oil on linen over panel, 19 1⁄2 × 13 1⁄2 in. (49.53 × 34.29 cm) Photo: Luc Demers, courtesy Foxy Production, New York

oil on canvas over panel, 22 × 15 in. (55.88 × 38.10 cm) Photo: Mark Woods, courtesy Foxy Production, New York