“I call Kay Sage a surrealist because her painting resonates with the unsettling paradoxes and hallucinatory qualities prized by André Breton and his group,” her biographer Judith D. Suther wrote. “More fundamentally, I call Sage a surrealist because her allegiance to the surrealist identity lies at the heart of her self-image as an artist.”
Sage’s works are architectural, centered around the shadows and folds of various materials and “imbued with an aura of purified form and a sense of motionlessness and impending doom found nowhere else in surrealism,” art historian Whitney Chadwick expressed. (http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/seven-female-surrealists_us_55b8f5d2e4b0074ba5a702c8)