Sarah Buckner is known for her use of painting as a medium for storytelling—both within each independent canvas, and through considered installations that group multiple paintings in a storyboard-like layout.
Read MoreVarying in detail, size, and abstraction of imagery, Buckner's painting offers a partial insight into an elusive overarching story, while also navigating painterly concerns such as form, colour, and narrative. Cycling between the fictional and the real, Buckner visualises narratives drawn from literature, film, and her imagination, as well as from personal experiences and observations, to create dreamlike sequences that elicit whimsical contemplation or escapist fantasy.
Buckner's paintings are characterised by their use of intense colour with strong emotive resonance, sympathetic to expressionism or Colour Field painting. Though the artist works primarily with oils, she treats them with a fluid, gouache-like approach, resulting in richly layered images with surreal undertones. Oil painting Das Spielistatus (2018) depicts a woman sleeping across a sofa with a butler standing in the background. The woman's fluid, dark form combined with layers of moody green and pink hues lends the composition a moody atmophere—inspired by the artist's stay in New York. In Justin (2019), a boy with a backpack sitting on the ground is tinged with a dark grey-blue wash, evoking a sense of melancholy or isolation.
Buckner's solo exhibition chances are (2019) at Ermes — Ermes in Cologne brought together a collection of paintings inspired by Lewis Carroll's novel, Through the Looking-Glass (1871).
The large-scale oil on canvas work Pleroma (2019) is almost comically made to look like an open book, spread edge to edge with blank pages. Tweedle (2019) depicts two roughly painted children seated outdoors at a table covered in a checkered cloth with three large black clamshells resting on top. Other paintings feature a boy looking down at his reflection in a pool of water, a rearing horse, cats, a mostly empty playground, and abstract studies of form and colour. Buckner's eccentric imagery rendered in a simplified, childlike style fittingly interprets fantastical narratives with nuance and material sensitivity.
On chances are, Paulina Seyfried wrote for Mousse Magazine: 'Determined by a sensitive, sometimes watercolour-like treatment of oil resin paints, [Buckner's] works are a combination of photographic notes on places and situations that undergo a transformation in to fantastic spheres.'