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Trevor Winkfield - Saints, Dancers and Acrobats

February 17 – March 25, 2018

Trevor Winkfield The Painter in Her Studio, 2014

Trevor Winkfield
The Painter in Her Studio, 2014
acrylic on linen
31 x 45 1/2 inches

Trevor Winkfield Signals, 2013

Trevor Winkfield
Signals, 2013
acrylic on linen
38 1/2 x 45 1/2 inches

Trevor Winkfield The Acrobats, 2015

Trevor Winkfield
The Acrobats, 2015
acrylic on linen
36 x 43 1/2 inches

Trevor Winkfield The Floating Crocodile and Her Keeper, 2013

Trevor Winkfield
The Floating Crocodile and Her Keeper, 2013
acrylic on linen
39 3/4 x 38 1/2 inches

Trevor Winkfield The First Dance, 2017

Trevor Winkfield
The First Dance, 2017
acrylic on linen
39  x 36 inches

Trevor Winkfield Acrobat, 2015

Trevor Winkfield
Acrobat, 2015
acrylic on linen
31 1/2 x 24 inches

Trevor Winkfield St. George and the Dragon, 2017

Trevor Winkfield
St. George and the Dragon, 2017
acrylic on linen
34 x 34 inches

Trevor Winkfield The Studio, 2015

Trevor Winkfield
The Studio, 2015
acrylic on linen
29 3/4 x 34 1/2 inches

Trevor Winkfield The Sundial, 2017

Trevor Winkfield
The Sundial, 2017
acrylic on linen
32 1/4 x 19 1/4 inches

Trevor Winkfield At the Circus, 2016

Trevor Winkfield
At the Circus, 2016
acrylic on linen
18 1/4 x 15 1/2 inches

Press Release

 

Tibor de Nagy is pleased to present an exhibition of recent paintings by Trevor Winkfield.  The exhibition titled Saints, Dancers and Acrobats will be Winkfield’s ninth solo show at the gallery, and his first at the gallery’s new Rivington Street location.

Over several decades, Winkfield has been working a consistent and methodical style of vibrantly colored, hard-edged painting.  For this exhibition, Winkfield focuses on figures - saints, dancers and acrobats and others depicted ready to engage in their respective roles.  In these works from the past four years, he continues his practice of first making collages that the final paintings are based upon.  With this method, he juxtaposes recognizable objects with fantasy or morphs forms into hybrids of the everyday and the uncanny.  The overall effect is that of dreamscapes or pop surrealist tableaus. Through the rhythm of shape and form, these works are infused with an intense energy and always executed with meticulous precision.

Throughout Winkfield’s career, his painting has been informed and influenced by poetry, including the work of his friends John Ashbery and James Schuyler. He is also a devotee of absurdist literature, especially the works of Raymond Roussel, whose writings he has translated. Winkfield has a passion for word play, puns and double entendres that in his paintings become a source of deft visual play. 

Trevor Winkfield, born in 1944, moved to New York from his native England in 1969. He has had many solo exhibitions over the last 20 years.  Currently he has a solo exhibition Milton Art Bank in Milton, Pennsylvania on view until April 21, and he recently had a two person exhibition (with Kate Abercrombie) at Fleischer/Ollman in Philadelphia.  He has received numerous awards, including a Pollock-Krasner Award and a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship.  In 2002, Winkfield was awarded the Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Artes et des Lettres by the French government.

Winkfield is also a writer, and has written extensively about art, in essays and reviews.  He is the author of two books Georges Braque & Others:  The Selected Art Writings of Trevor Winkfield, 1990-2009 and How I Became a Painter:  Trevor Winkfield in Conversation with Miles Champion.

About Tibor de Nagy
Tibor de Nagy continues its significant role in contemporary American Art since its founding in 1950. In June 2017, the gallery moved to the Lower East Side, joining Betty Cuningham Gallery in a shared space at 15 and 11 Rivington Streets.

Tibor de Nagy Gallery presents exhibitions of such contemporary artists as Sarah McEneaney, Trevor Winkfield and Jen Mazza, as well artists from the Post War second generation New York School. Its long history includes the first exhibitions of Carl Andre, Helen Frankenthaler, Jane Freilicher, Red Grooms, Grace Hartigan, Alfred Leslie, Fairfield Porter, and Larry Rivers. The gallery’s program continues its mission to present a broad overview of contemporary art of singular vision including recent exhibitions of Hannah Wilke, Francis Picabia, and Jess. This unique history has also fostered collaborations between poets and artists. The gallery was the first publisher of the poems of John Ashbery, Frank O'Hara, Kenneth Koch, and James Schuyler.

Listings Information:
Tibor de Nagy Gallery is located at 15 Rivington Street on the Lower East Side
Tel: 212 262 5050. | Web: www.tibordenagy.com | Email: info@tibordenagy.com
Gallery Hours: Wednesday – Saturday 10am – 6pm, Sunday 12pm – 6pm

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