Susanne Kraißer b. 1977

Sculptures that don't need to shout-because they stay with you.

 

Born in 1977 in Rosenheim, Germany, Susanne Kraißer is one of those rare artists who not only masters classical sculpture, but makes it feel alive again. In an art world often obsessed with noise and novelty, she works quietly, precisely-and lands right where it matters most. Her medium is bronze. Her language is the body. Her impact is immediate.

 

Trained as a woodcarver in Munich and later as a master student in both Nuremberg and Bremen, Kraißer's technique is flawless. But what truly defines her work is not the skill-it's the stillness. The emotional tension. The subtle beauty that doesn't ask to be understood, but felt.

 

Her figures-mostly women, often small, sometimes monumental-exist in a moment between movement and pause. They lean, stand, float. They hold space without effort. Without drama. Their surfaces are soft, almost blurred, but beneath that softness lies a deep sculptural clarity that's impossible to ignore.

 

And while her work is rooted in tradition, it resonates across generations. People stop. They look longer than they planned. They sense something-sometimes before they even realize what they're seeing. Her sculptures don't explain themselves. They let you feel your way in.

 

In a time when classical sculpture is becoming rare, Kraißer keeps it alive-not as a nostalgic gesture, but as a powerful statement. Her bronze figures aren't stuck in the past. They speak to now. They ground us.

 

Her work has been shown internationally and is part of notable private collections. But beyond fairs and institutions, her pieces live on-in rooms, in memory, in the body.

 

To stand in front of a sculpture by Susanne Kraißer is to feel time shift.

Quiet. Strong. And unforgettable.