Maja Ruznic

1983–

Introduction

Maja Ruznic (born 1983) is a Bosnia-Herzegovina-born, New Mexico-based visual artist. She is known for introspective, color field-like paintings that merge figuration and abstraction through ghostly forms that materialize out of fluid, undefined spaces. Ruznic's work draws upon art history, personal experience, and interests in mystical belief, folklore and psychoanalytic thought. She explores themes involving spiritual transcendence, family relationships and motherhood, and the experience of shared trauma. Critic Barry Schwabsky wrote that Ruznic's compositions effect "a dreamy, quasi-symbolist vibe" in which permeable, uncertain boundaries between figures, forms and spaces convey "the idea that there are goings-on in the world that are inaccessible to a purely empirical perception."

Ruznic's work belongs to the public collections of the Whitney Museum, Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art , and Dallas Museum of Art, among others. She has exhibited at the Aspen Art Museum, Harwood Museum of Art, Museo di Palazzo Pretorio and Roswell Museum and Art Center. She was selected to appear in the Whitney Biennial In 2024 and SITE Santa Fe in 2025.

Wikidata identifier

Q116255763

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Information from Wikipedia, made available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License . Accessed June 26, 2025.

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First acquired
2025

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artists/21049





On the Hour

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Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

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