SAN FRANCISCO, CA.- Haines Gallery is presenting Equations, our ninth solo exhibition with Northern California painter Patsy Krebs (b. 1940, lives and works in Inverness, CA). Since the 1970s, Krebs has created canvases that imbue abstract geometry with a lush sensualism. Her work exemplifies the restrained dignity of minimalism at its very best elegant, intelligent, and enigmatic.
Equations draws upon three decades of Krebs practice, ranging from paintings created during the early 1990s to newly completed works from 2024. Much like Krebs paintings themselves, which reveal them- selves slowly and reward extended viewing, the exhibition will evolve over time; the regular addition of new works from distinct but related series within an oeuvre defined by Krebs contemplative, refined sensibility and her long-standing preoccupation with our perceptions of color, light, and space.
Krebs spent the early 1960s in New York, where she was part of a community of artists that included Dean Fleming, Leo Valledor, and Tamara Melcher. The carefully plotted, intersecting geometric elements of her Fan seriesthe earliest works in the shownod to the influence of 1960s geometric abstraction on her practice, as well as East Asian paintings, scrolls, and screens.
Over the last two decades, Krebs pursuit of spatial ambiguity has taken on a more veiled, complex quality, achieved through the inter- play of translucency and transparency, rather than with hard-edged forms. The exhibition includes several of the terraced, symmetrical compositions that Krebs has turned to time and again. In these works, the artist creates mesmerizing surfaces through innumerable layers of thinned acrylic washes, building up to a central square or rectangular form that hovers within the painting, simultaneously focusing and dissolving from view. Krebs masterful layering of closely related values and hues creates the illusion of depth and motion within the canvas. As a result, even the darkest paintings in the exhibitionthe columnar, twilight-hued Nocturne works from 2024seem to pulse with interior light, and our perspectives shift between gazing into and out from these tremulous thresholds.
Equations includes several series executed in watercolor, where the precision of her acrylic paintings is traded for fluidity and mutability. In her Elysion seriesnamed for the Elysian Fields in Greek mythology, a place after life for the gods favored warriors, at the western edges of the worldelongated rectangular panels are bisected by a thin horizontal line, from which atmospheric washes of color appear to arise and descend. The works formally suggest the junction of earth and sky, but rather than addressing the physical landscape, Elysion contemplates our human perception of the horizon as both distance and boundary. It is as far as we can see in a given direction, and the inside edge of what is seeable. Each painting presents an openness, an expanse, as well as an imaginary edge or border.
Reflecting on the exhibitions title, the artist explains, It ties to my feeling about mathematics and art being the only languages we have with which to talk about what is inexpressible in words. Krebs paintings reach for the ineffable, distilling her keen observations of formal traditions, systems of knowledge, and natural phenomena into spare, elegantly reduced compositions that slowly, quietly reveal their complexities. Her canvases invite us into their tranquil confines, while retaining a core of mystery and spirit.
Patsy Krebs work is held by leading museum collections including the Berkeley Museum of Art, CA; Brooklyn Museum of Art, NY; Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA; Denver Art Museum, CO; de Saisset Museum, Santa Clara University, CA; Norton Museum, West Palm Beach, FL; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA; and San Jose Museum of Art, CA. She has been the recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, Pollock-Krasner Foundation, and Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation. Patsy Krebs: Painting, a monographic survey of her work, was published in 2017.