Sarah Slappey

Sarah Slappey Paints the Self Anew

By the editors at The Collection·April 21, 2026

Artist Spotlight · The Collection Editorial

Something quietly electric has been building around Sarah Slappey. Over the past several years, her paintings have moved steadily from the walls of discerning galleries into the hands of collectors who recognize in her work a rare combination of psychological honesty and visual pleasure. Her figures, rendered in oil and acrylic with a brushwork that is simultaneously loose and deliberate, have appeared at auction and in gallery presentations that signal an artist whose moment has fully arrived. Slappey is not an overnight discovery so much as a sustained revelation, one that rewards those who have been paying careful attention.

Sarah Slappey — Two works: (i) Navy Ribbon and Pins I; (ii) Navy Ribbon and Pins II

Sarah Slappey

Two works: (i) Navy Ribbon and Pins I; (ii) Navy Ribbon and Pins II, 2021

Slappey is American, and her formation as a painter reflects a deep engagement with the figurative tradition as it has evolved on both sides of the Atlantic. She came to painting with a seriousness about the body and about what paint itself can do when it is pushed toward psychological territory. Her influences read like a thoughtful survey of art history's most searching portraitists and figure painters, from the intimacy of nineteenth century salon painting to the raw emotional directness of twentieth century expressionism. This breadth of reference gives her work an unusual density, a sense that each canvas is in conversation with a long lineage even as it announces something distinctly her own.

The development of Slappey's practice has centered on a persistent and generous inquiry into femininity, identity, and the particular experience of inhabiting a body in the world. Her figures are often solitary, caught in moments of interior life rather than social performance. There is no sense of the male gaze organizing the composition or determining the terms of looking. Instead, Slappey constructs a pictorial space in which the figure exists on her own terms, surrounded by color and pattern that feel less like decoration than like the external manifestation of an interior state.

Sarah Slappey — Breast Study

Sarah Slappey

Breast Study, 2020

This fusion of the psychological and the decorative is one of the defining achievements of her mature practice. Among her most celebrated works, the diptych pairing Navy Ribbon and Pins I and Navy Ribbon and Pins II from 2021 demonstrates the full range of her ambitions. Executed in oil and acrylic on paper, the two works form a dialogue about constraint and adornment, about the objects women use to hold themselves together in both practical and symbolic senses. Breast Study from 2020, also in oil on paper, shows Slappey at her most direct and tender, approaching the female form with a curiosity that is clinical and warm at once.

Grey Squeeze from 2019 and Tan Cloud II from the same year reveal her mastery of tonal atmosphere, with figures that seem to emerge from or dissolve into their painted surroundings. Reflection (Winterhalter) from 2017 is particularly rich in art historical layering, invoking the German portraitist Franz Xaver Winterhalter whose sumptuous images of nineteenth century aristocratic women Slappey reexamines through a contemporary sensibility. The printmaking dimension of Slappey's practice adds another layer of complexity to an already nuanced body of work. Her lithographs, including Tied Up II and the hand colored variant Tied Up II HPM I, extend her investigation into the figure while introducing the particular qualities of the print medium, the flatness, the reproducibility, and in the case of the hand colored version, the irreducible singularity of the artist's direct touch.

Sarah Slappey — Tied Up II – HPM I

Sarah Slappey

Tied Up II – HPM I

The red oil pastel additions to Tied Up II HPM I transform a printed image into something closer to drawing, collapsing the distance between the mechanical and the handmade. This series reflects a sophisticated understanding of how meaning changes when a medium changes, even when the subject remains the same. From a collecting perspective, Slappey represents a compelling opportunity at a moment when the market for serious figurative painting by women artists has matured considerably. Works on paper, including the oil and acrylic pieces that have defined much of her recent output, offer an accessible entry point into a practice that is also represented by significant canvases.

Collectors drawn to artists such as Cecily Brown, Francesca Mollett, or the more psychologically charged figurative painters working in the lineage of Paula Rego will find in Slappey a natural companion. Her work also resonates with admirers of the American painters who have refreshed the figure in recent decades, those who understand the body as a site of meaning rather than merely a subject of representation. Within the broader context of contemporary art, Slappey occupies a position that feels both grounded and forward looking. She takes seriously the history of figurative painting without being enslaved to it, and she brings to that tradition a set of concerns that are unmistakably of this moment.

Sarah Slappey — Grey Squeeze

Sarah Slappey

Grey Squeeze, 2019

The question of how women see themselves, how they are seen, and how painting can hold both of those things simultaneously without resolving the tension between them is a question that animates her practice at every level. Artists working in adjacent territory include those who have similarly brought expressionist brushwork to bear on questions of gender and embodiment, from the British painters who trained at the Royal Academy to American contemporaries exploring similar themes in studios across New York and the South. What Slappey offers, ultimately, is a body of work that grows more rewarding the longer you spend with it. The initial pleasure is immediate, that saturated color, that confident mark making, the sense of a painter in full command of her materials.

But the deeper satisfactions take time to emerge: the recognition of a figure caught in genuine psychological complexity, the understanding that the patterns and colors surrounding her are not background but meaning. For collectors building a thoughtful collection of contemporary painting, Slappey is precisely the kind of artist whose work will continue to deepen in significance as the years pass. She is painting something true about being alive right now, and that is a quality that does not diminish with time.

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