Sonja Braas exhibition examines how photography shapes our perception of reality at Galerie Tanit
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Sonja Braas exhibition examines how photography shapes our perception of reality at Galerie Tanit
Sonja Braas, "Container" aus der Serie "An Abundance of Caution", 2015. Pigment Print, 176 x 144 cm © Sonja Braas.



MUNICH.- Sonja Braas examines the formation of perception and the ways in which photography mediates our relationship to the world. Even though photographic images may be staged or manipulated, they remain culturally embedded as forms of evidence—circulating through social media, news media, and personal snapshots as if they were transparent records of reality. At the core of Sonja Braas’s practice lies this tension: between trust and doubt, between what appears self-evident and what is revealed as constructed.

The photographs evoke idealized visions of the natural world; at once idyllic, sublime, or catastrophically destructive, yet they originate in meticulously constructed sets that the artist builds and subsequently photographs. A tornado formed from wire and cotton, an iceberg modeled in concrete, or a jungle assembled from pipe cleaners all appear to offer the viewer an imagined escape: into beauty, into wilderness, into a world seemingly untouched by human presence. Their large scale (up to 60 × 82 inches) intensifies this effect, enveloping the viewer through their physical presence, theatricality, and visual drama. This format encourages emotional immersion while simultaneously disclosing subtle traces of fabrication: the edges of the set, the material seams, and constructed details that interrupt illusion. These moments of exposure shift the experience from immersion to awareness. The photograph can no longer function as a stable window onto nature; instead, the viewer is positioned within a continuous negotiation between attraction and skepticism, directed not only at the image but by the act of looking itself.

Braas develops each series as a cohesive whole, beginning with preparatory drawings that map out the images in advance, akin to a storyboard. The construction of the sets is deliberately slow, often unfolding over months or years for a single photograph. Building, sculpting, and painting these environments involves iterative processes of trial and error, where accidents and material contingencies frequently open unexpected directions and alter the original conception. The eventual dismantling and destruction of the sets underscores the primacy of the photograph: the scene has existed materially, but only provisionally, and now survives solely as its image.

While each series is defined by a distinct conceptual focus, they remain interconnected as part of a sustained inquiry. The Other Day (2018–ongoing) reflects on nostalgia for an idealized nature that no longer exists. An Abundance of Caution (2014–2017) considers how fear and uncertainty shape perception. The Passage (2009–2012) constructs a fictional trajectory through time and space. The Quiet of Dissolution (2005–2010) engages with the aestheticization of destruction, while Forces (2002–2003) explores the idea of the sublime. Her earliest series, You Are Here (1998–2000), investigates how photographs condition expectations and construct a sense of place. Taken together, these works form an ongoing investigation into how images produce reality, and how viewers continuously navigate that production.

Within Braas’s practice, nature operates less as subject than as a conceptual and metaphorical stage upon which ideas are projected and tested. A prolonged stay in the rainforests of Central America intensified this inquiry. Immersed in dense vegetation, the artist experienced a peculiar sense of detachment, perceiving the environment through layers of mediation, expectation, and pre-existing imagery. The experience resembled standing behind glass: simultaneously within and separated from the world. This encounter between internal imagery and external reality, and the recognition of perception as culturally and visually conditioned, continues to inform her work.

Photography thus becomes a critical instrument for examining the mechanisms of perception and the persistence of belief in images. By constructing and dismantling landscapes—producing scenes that oscillate between seduction and unease—Braas stages a momentary suspension of disbelief, only to destabilize it. Her photographs function simultaneously as affective images and conceptual propositions, articulating a practice grounded in the understanding that images do not simply represent reality, but actively participate in its construction.










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