NEW YORK, NY.- Tibor de Nagy Gallery is presenting Trevor Winkfield: The Mermaids Revenge, an exhibition of paintings made between 1991 and 2001. This was an especially inventive and productive decade for Winkfield, who, working in a sizable studio, was able to realize a series of ambitious, large-scale paintings.
Born in England, Winkfield moved to New York in 1969 and settled here permanently. He quickly became part of a vibrant circle of New York artists and poets. Yet the imagery of his homeland remained indelibly inscribed in his imagination, particularly a medieval and ceremonial England of heraldry, chivalry, court jesters, and the symbolic language of orbs, swords, and scepters. It is to this imagined homeland that many of the paintings from the 1990s allude. In a catalogue devoted to these works, published in 1997, Jed Perl quoted the artists vivid memory of Queen Elizabeth IIs coronation in 1953. Winkfield recalled being struck by all the ceremony and religious ritual, particularly the handing over of the regalia from archbishop to sovereign, and the hierarchical poses adopted by the sovereign when weighted down by the regalia.
At the same time, these paintings embrace a distinctly modern language of abstraction and vivid pop color, uniting their imagery into tableaux of idealized forms. As Ashbery suggests, form and subject are inseparable in Winkfields work. The painting's strange juxtapositions and narrative hints are like music in creating less a fixed story than a kind of pinball movement through themes and variations. Throughout his career, Winkfields painting has been deeply informed by poetry, including the work of his friends John Ashbery and James Schuyler. He has also been an avid reader and translator of absurdist literature, especially the writings of Raymond Roussel. His delight in wordplay, puns, and double entendre finds a visual analogue in his paintings of wit, elegance, and invention.
Since the 1970s, Winkfield has had numerous solo exhibitions in New York and elsewhere. Over the course of his career, he has received many honors, including a Pollock-Krasner Award and a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. In 2002, he was named Chevalier dans lOrdre des Arts et des Lettres by the French government. In addition to his work as a painter, Winkfield has written extensively on art in essays and reviews. He is the author of Georges Braque & Others: The Selected Art Writings of Trevor Winkfield, 19902009 and How I Became a Painter: Trevor Winkfield in Conversation with Miles Champion.