Sabrina Puppin is a visual artist whose work doesn’t just hang quietly on the wall — it demands to be felt. Her paintings are known for their hyper-colorful, shining, and almost overwhelming abstract forms. Across her career, Puppin has exhibited her art around the globe, drawing viewers into a world that challenges the way we see reality. Her work isn’t about representing what we know; it’s about exploring daydreams, emotions, and the distortion of perception. Puppin doesn’t offer simple illustrations. Instead, she creates experiences — bold invitations to dive deeper, to feel, to wonder, and to reflect. In her abstract compositions, colors and shapes collide in ways that seem both intentional and free, leaving space for anyone who encounters her work to find their own meaning inside the movement.

The Work: Gale (2025)
In her 2025 piece Gale, Sabrina Puppin delivers a visual storm packed into a 63″ x 51″ canvas. It’s a big work — and it feels even bigger once you’re standing in front of it.
Gale isn’t a literal depiction of anything. There are no clear figures, no horizon lines, no skies or oceans. Yet somehow, it still captures the essence of powerful natural forces: wind, waves, storms. Puppin uses sweeping, undulating lines that seem to move right across the canvas, curling and flowing with a rhythm that feels alive.
The colors hit you first. Rich, fiery reds and oranges roll into cooler earth tones and deep blues. These aren’t flat, basic colors either; they blend, clash, and bleed into each other, creating a layered tapestry. The warmer tones pull you in with intensity, while the cooler colors offer a kind of relief — a place for the eye to rest before being swept up again. The color shifts are not abrupt. They roll into one another, the way a real gale builds up momentum: slow, then fast, pulling everything along with it.
There’s a clear sense of motion in Gale. The rhythmic curves of the lines create a visual music, a beat that carries your gaze across the surface without stopping. Some lines layer over others, creating depth and the illusion of three-dimensional space. It’s like being inside the phenomenon, not just observing it from a distance.
But Puppin’s Gale isn’t chaotic. Even as the energy builds, there’s a kind of order underneath. The curves and color transitions are balanced. You get the feeling that nothing is accidental, even if the work feels loose and spontaneous at first glance. It’s a controlled storm — an intentional release.
And that’s where Puppin’s strength really shines. She plays with intensity and softness at the same time. She pulls heavy emotions into a light, flowing form. Instead of hitting you over the head with a message, she leaves you floating somewhere in between — caught between excitement, tension, and wonder.
The medium itself — mixed media on canvas — adds texture and depth you can’t see fully in photographs. In person, the surface shifts with the light. Different areas of the painting reveal new layers, tiny surprises hidden within the broader sweep of movement. It reinforces the feeling that Gale is not a static work. It changes depending on where you stand, on how long you look, on what you bring into the experience.
At its core, Gale is an exploration of energy, emotion, and change. It’s a painting that reminds you that perception itself is a moving target. What feels overwhelming one moment can feel beautiful the next. What seems chaotic from afar can feel harmonious up close.
Like much of Puppin’s work, Gale doesn’t offer easy answers. It’s not about figuring out what the painting “means.” It’s about being inside it — letting yourself feel the push and pull, the warmth and the coolness, the lift and the drop.
Sabrina Puppin doesn’t just show you a world. She invites you into it, asks you to get caught in its current, and lets you find your own footing inside the storm.