Skip to content
SARAH BRAMAN 8pm

SARAH BRAMAN
8pm
2011
Camper chunk, steel, plexiglas, and paint
41 1/2 by 52 by 48 in. 105.4 by 132.1 by 121.9 cm.

SARAH BRAMAN Breakfast

SARAH BRAMAN
Breakfast
2011
Camper chunk, steel, plexiglas, and paint
77 1/4 by 107 by 93 in. 196.2 by 271.8 by 236.2

SARAH BRAMAN Breakfast

SARAH BRAMAN
Breakfast
2011
Camper chunk, steel, plexiglas, and paint
77 1/4 by 107 by 93 in. 196.2 by 271.8 by 236.2

SARAH BRAMAN Lay Down Down

SARAH BRAMAN
Lay Down Down
2011
Spray-paint and latex on plywood
76 1/2 by 87 3/4 194.3 by 222.9 cm.

SARAH BRAMAN Empty bottle, broken heart and you're still on my mind

SARAH BRAMAN
Empty bottle, broken heart and you're still on my mind
2011
Spray-paint and latex on plywood
62 5/8 by 57 1/2 in. 159.1 by 146.1 cm.

SARAH BRAMAN Coffin

SARAH BRAMAN
Coffin
2011
Camper chunk, steel, plexiglas, and paint
59 1/4 by 77 1/2 by 41 3/8 in. 150.5 by 196.9 by 105.1 cm.

SARAH BRAMAN Outside Night

SARAH BRAMAN
Outside Night
2011
Spray-paint and latex on plywood and mattress
93 by 71 by 5 in. 236.2 by 180.3 by 12.7 cm.

SARAH BRAMAN Sunderland Drive

SARAH BRAMAN
Sunderland Drive
2011
Spray-paint and latex on door and camper
38 1/2 by 32 5/8 by 2 1/8 97.8 by 82.9 by 5.4 cm.

Press Release

Mitchell-Innes & Nash is pleased to present Sarah Braman: Yours. The artist’s first show at the gallery will feature several new sculptures and wall works. For this exhibition, Braman has deconstructed an entire camper and incorporated slices and chunks of it into a number of different works. The resulting sculptures collapse inside and outside in a way that’s funny and uncanny, familiar and resolutely odd. Braman’s sculptures are monuments to everyday life, and to the interplay between sensory experience and emotional resonance. She combines parts scavenged from vehicles, old buildings, or furniture with translucent volumes of color and light to construct her precariously balanced sculptures. In their formal construction, they relate to the legacies of minimalism and color field painting. Yet they defy modernist tunnel vision with their joyful immersion in lived experience and emotional life: they suggest themes of home, family, and nature. Braman's use of materials also takes this dichotomy as a governing principle: colored plexi serves purely as a vehicle for light, volume, and color, while wood and cardboard bear evidence of use and wear. Braman’s sculptural works are always experienced in the round, yielding multiple vantage points and endless variations. In creating these ever-shifting points of view, Braman asks the viewer to take an active part in creating meaning: the exhibition's title, Yours, connotes an offering or a salutation, but also alludes to the viewer's role in the work. Sarah Braman has exhibited in museums and institutions in the US and Europe. Her first European solo exhibition was on view in 2011 at MACRO in Rome, Italy. She was included in the 2010 Lisbon Biennal in Portugal and 2005 Greater New York at PS1 Contemporary Art Center in Long Island City, as well as exhibitions in Copenhagen, London, and Berlin. She has had New York solo exhibitions at Canada and Museum 52. She received her MFA from Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia in 1998, and her BFA from Maryland Institute College of Art in Baltimore in 1992.