Storms of Light, Shadows of Memory
Born in 1982 in Valjevo, Serbia, Ana Pušica Krämer emerged from a landscape scarred by political upheaval and social unrest. Now based in Munich, Germany, her work bridges geographic and emotional terrains, shaped by early years spent navigating the instability of a post-conflict society. For her, painting is not simply a profession, but a sanctuary — a kinetic and visceral response to a world often split by contradiction. The canvas becomes her safe space, where vivid energy transforms internal disarray into something resonant and alive. Within the layers of her work, one finds not protest or political commentary, but a relentless pursuit of emotional alchemy.
Her style resists stillness. Instead, it embraces velocity — what she affectionately compares to a “beautiful fluorescent thunderstorm.” This metaphor reflects her signature approach: charged, unpredictable, and luminous. Within her practice, vibrant colours and intuitive gestures collide in an urgent dance, defying conventional structure. Working across vast surfaces, she paints not with distance, but with physical intimacy, her entire body involved in each mark. The result is not merely an image, but a living imprint of motion, emotion, and instinct. Her art channels the rhythm of existence, shaped by both childhood solitude and the demands of the present.
Pušica Krämer’s career has stretched across continents, with exhibitions in cities as varied as Munich, New York, Riyadh, Xiamen, Melbourne, and the Maldives. Regardless of location, however, her foundation remains unchanged: painting as experience, as necessity. Trained at the Academy of Fine Arts in Munich under Professor Anke Doberauer, and previously at the Art High School Bogdan Šuput in Novi Sad, she carries forward a tradition of rigorous study, yet never abandons the raw spontaneity that defines her work. Whether in her Munich studio or a remote island residency, her creative pulse beats to the rhythm of colour, movement, and urgency.
