Cristine Brache Biography

Cristine Brache is an artist, filmmaker and poet who uses her practice to explore the power dynamics of womanhood, trauma and shared histories. She takes an interest in how individuals codify their appearance or behaviour in order to survive. In the mid-2020s, Brache’s work focused on the life of Dorothy Stratten, the Playboy model, aspiring actress and poet murdered aged just 20 in 1980.

Early Years

Cristine Brache was born in Miami in 1984 to Puerto Rican and Cuban parents. She started writing poetry in fifth grade, although admits she “didn’t start taking it that seriously” until she was 17 and trying to get published. She was influenced by Rene Ricard’s book of poems God with Revolver. Brache says she got into video art during high school but she only began to see herself as an artist when she made a sculpture for a friend. She gained her BFA at Florida State University then travelled to London, Thailand and China (she gained her MFA from the Slade School of Fine Arts in London). Brache married Canadian artist and writer Brad Phillips in 2016 and lives and works in Toronto.

Artworks

Cristine Brache explores ideas of codification in order to adapt and survive in oppressive environments. This codification might manifest itself through the ways female emotion and oppression are considered, as symptoms of gaslighting, or indeed via surrealism. She considers how different versions of “womanhood” are given to women or worn as a mask. Early works considered the shrines that populated the yards in her childhood neighbourhoods in Miami, and a later focus is Dorothy Stratten, the late Playboy bunny, poet and aspiring actress—Brache believes that Stratten hasn’t been appropriately honoured because her biography and biopic were shaped by male agendas.

Brache uses encaustic techniques in her painting, combining hot wax and pigment to give her works “a vintage, oneiric haze”: faces and bodies blur into the idea of a memory rather than a photograph.

  • The Bunny Series (2026) is a key example of Brache’s encaustic technique, focusing on the ears and tails of the iconic Playboy bunny costume while blurring the faces of the women wearing them, asking us to consider how the models were viewed as props rather than humans.
  • From the same exhibition, Dorothy Diptych (2025) is clearly inspired by Warhol’s Marlyn Monroe portraits, featuring close-up, painted reproductions of Dorothy Stratten’s face, again presenting the idea that Stratten’s story was always presented from a male point of view.
  • 2019’s Be Brave was an installation that formed part of a solo exhibition exploring the front-yard shrines of Brache’s childhood neighbourhoods. Brache considered the idea of coded, self-made worship, centring on Orishas (saints) and offerings for them. Be Brave features a porcelain sculpture of the Orisha mounted on cinder blocks alongside faux candles and magic 8 balls.

Select Solo Exhibitions

  • Centerfolds, Bernheim Gallery townhouse (2026)
  • Dorothy’s Dream (booth exhibition), NADA Miami (2023)
  • Commit me; Commit to me (Cázame; Cásame) , Fierman, NYC (2020)
  • Cristine’s Secret Garden, Locust Projects, Miami (2019)

Select Group Exhibitions

  • Life Imitates Art, Anthony Gallery, Chicago (2026)
  • Search for Tomorrow, Bernheim Gallery, Zurich (2025–2026)

Further reading

Cristine Brache FAQs

Who was Dorothy Stratten?

Dorothy Stratten was a Canadian model, poet and actress who rose to fame as a Playboy Playmate during the late 1970s. She was Playboy’s Playmate of the Year in 1980 and her acting career was just taking off when she was murdered by her estranged husband Paul Snider. Stratten’s life was realised on the big screen in the 1983 movie Star 80.

What are the main themes in Cristine Brache’s work?

Cristine Brache asks us to consider ideas of womanhood and trauma, considering ways in which behaviour and appearance is codified to cope with oppressive environments. Her telling of the story of Dorothy Stratten is a conscious move to break away from its original presentation, which Brache asserts occurred solely through the male gaze.

Did Cristine Brache collaborate with a perfume-maker?

Yes, for her 2026 London exhibition Centerfolds, about the murdered Playboy star Dorothy Stratten, Cristine Brache worked with perfumer Marissa Zappas. Brache explained that she wanted to “create a sensory arc that mirrors the conceptual one” and that the scent is a blend of frankincense, apricot, banana and lily of the valley.

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Representative Artworks

Cristine Brache, Suds (2025) Two panels, oil, ink, and encaustic on cotton wood. Courtesy Cristine Brache and Bernheim Gallery. Photo: Eva Herzog.
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Cristine Brache, Playmate of the Year (Study) (2025). Two panels, oil, ink and encaustic silk and wood. Courtesy Cristine Brache and Bernheim Gallery. Photo: Eva Herzog.
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Cristine Brache, Headshots (2025). Two panels, oil, ink and encaustic on silk and wood. Courtesy Cristine Brache and Bernheim Gallery. Photo: Eva Herzog.
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Cristine Brache, After the Pageant (2025). Oil, ink and encaustic on cotton and wood. Courtesy Cristine Brache and Bernheim Gallery. Photo: Eva Herzog.
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Cristine Brache, Table Daning (2025). Oil, ink and encaustic on cotton and wood. Courtesy Cristine Brache and Bernheim Gallery. Photo: Eva Herzog.
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Cristine Brache, Ecstasy (2025). Two panels, oil, ink and encaustic on silk and wood. Courtesy Cristine Brache and Bernheim Gallery. Photo: Eva Herzog.
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Cristine Brache, Centerfold (2024). Oil and encaustic on cotton and wood. Courtesy Cristine Brache and Bernheim Gallery. Photo: Eva Herzog.
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Cristine Brache in Ocula Magazine

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