Brian’s Artwork Selection

Every artwork is a unique original, painted with acrylic and charcoal on canvas. Each piece is part of a larger body of work exploring identity, memory, and the quiet weight of human experience.

The deepest ones fly the furthest.

Diving feels like flying. Every time. All weight gone. Everything still. And then comes the curiosity. To discover things that are barely reachable. Kids have that so unfiltered. Maybe they help us learn to fly again 🪁

Acrylic, Charcoal and Mixed Media on Canvas, 33 × 75 in

Who says I can’t?

When I was a kid, I had a dream. A big one. And somewhere along the way, the world got loud. Too loud. And the dream got quiet. I think a lot of us know that feeling. This piece came from a moment where I decided to stop listening to the noise. A little girl, an astronaut suit, and one question painted across the canvas: who says I can’t? She’s looking right at you. She’s not asking for permission. She’s just asking: do you still remember yours?

Acrylic, Charcoal and Mixed Media on Canvas,
59 × 79 in

You need it more than I do.

Kids feel more than we think. We try to protect them, and that’s right. But there’s a moment, when they’re old enough, where pretending doesn’t help anyone anymore. This girl knows something is heavy. And instead of turning away, she holds out her superwoman doll. Quietly. Without making it a big thing. Not because she should carry his weight. But because she’s choosing to, with all the love in her small chest. That’s the moment I wanted to paint 🪁

Acrylic, Charcoal and Mixed Media on Canvas,
59 × 79 in

(SOLD)

„Take a pen, not a weapon“ I

At 18, Daniel travels more than an hour each day across Rio to sell iced tea and cookies on Ipanema Beach. Already a father of two, he carries responsibilities far beyond his age.

When asked about his hopes for the future, his answer was simple:

“Pick up a pen, not a weapon.”

Based on a conversation with Daniel in Ipanema, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Canvas, 39 × 39 in

(SOLD)

„Take a pen, not a weapon“ II

At 18, Daniel travels more than an hour each day across Rio to sell iced tea and cookies on Ipanema Beach. Already a father of two, he carries responsibilities far beyond his age.

When asked about his hopes for the future, his answer was simple:

“Pick up a pen, not a weapon.”

Based on a conversation with Daniel in Ipanema, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil.

Acrylic and Collage on Canvas,13 × 9.5 in

„Oh, Ghana“

View from my accommodation in Ghana. My first trip alone and one that taught me more than any classroom ever could. A place that changed how I see the world, and my place in it. 🪁

Acrylic and Mixed Media on Canvas, 47 × 28 in

Selected Testimonial

„I bought Hannah because that face wouldn’t let me go. Those eyes with that presence. The painting hangs in my living room and every morning when I look at it, it reminds me of something I don’t want to forget. Sarah doesn’t paint portraits. She paints stories someone has lived. Thank you!“

ABOUT

Sarah Bischof Giuliani

Sarah Bischof Giuliani is a Swiss contemporary artist who built her vision – traveling across countries, working in social fields, studying human fragility.

Trained at the Kunsthochschule Zurich Art & Education, she worked for years alongside her art, with refugees and people with mental disabilities. That closeness to unspoken stories became the core of her visual language.

Since 2024, she works fully independently as an artist and graphic designer, on her own terms.

Sarah transforms lost dreams into contemporary work.

Available to collectors worldwide.