Quintessa Matranga renders a figure that appears both anchored and dissolving, its features softened into muted greys against a luminous yellow ground. The body holds an object that hovers between plant and form, never settling into fixed representation. This ambiguity recalls the spectral figuration of Edvard Munch and the later experiments of Philip Guston, where symbols and bodies teeter between legibility and abstraction. At the same time, Matranga’s restrained handling of paint—at once gestural and deliberate—connects to a lineage of postwar painters such as Leon Golub and Maria Lassnig, who tested the psychological reach of the human figure. By allowing her image to remain suspended in a state of becoming, Matranga resists closure, offering the viewer an open field for memory, association, and slow looking.
Framed: 19.6 x 21.4 x 1.5 in.
Unsigned
Shipping & Returns:
We are unable to ship to P.O. boxes.

About the artist:

At the center of Matranga’s current practice is a renewed embrace of painting as part of everyday life. Her works draw on fleeting moments—glimpses of leisure, observation, and pause—that become starting points for painterly exploration. Figures and forms are depersonalized and gently abstracted; specificity blurs, leaving behind images that are more open-ended than declarative. This shift marks a move away from her earlier, more conceptual paintings toward a language that is lyrical, intuitive, and inclusive, where humor, intimacy, and atmosphere unfold through process rather than statement.

Quintessa Matranga (b. 1989, New York) is a painter, curator, and multidisciplinary creative whose practice explores the interiority of everyday life. She currently lives and works in San Francisco, California.

Matranga studied at the San Francisco Art Institute, entering the painting department before choosing an unconventional path through experimentation and self-directed trajectory. Her early works often referenced domestic or banal imagery, distilled through a visual lens at once whimsical, grotesque, and intimate.

After spending a formative period working and exhibiting in New York, Matranga returned to San Francisco in 2020. This move prompted a gradual reappraisal of her relationship to painting, allowing her to shed the demands of working within the crowded New York art world and instead approach her practice more autonomously. While previously known for conceptual paintings that leaned on humor and personal narrative, her recent works reflect a painterly core rooted in day-to-day life.

Matranga has exhibited internationally. Her solo show Water Sign (House of Seiko, San Francisco, 2025) marked a recent highlight. Other solo and group exhibitions include Age 81 at What Pipeline (Detroit), Rhetoric in Berlin, and Me at 3AM at Queer Thoughts, New York.

In addition to her studio practice, Matranga also curates projects and exhibitions. One example: she organized An Increasingly Desperate Man at Alter Space (San Francisco) in 2016, inviting artists to respond to the pressures and crises of creative life.

Her work has been discussed in Cultured, ARTnews, and other art press outlets.

Specs:

21.38 inches
19.63 inches
with frame
21.38 inches
19.63 inches
1.5 inches
19.63 inches
Quintessa Matranga:
Bamboo Champagne, 2025
Acrylic and white chalk on canvas in artist frame
19.6 × 21.4 inches /