Essay
2015

Realism Transformed: John Winslow's Wild New World

Published on
July 13, 2015
Author(s)
Benjamin Forgey
Product Manager
Publication

July 13-August 26, 2015Solo Exhibition​

American University Museum at the Katzen Arts Center

48-page catalog written by Benjamin Forgey.

In the summer of 1981, John Winslow—already an acknowledged master of illusionist realism—recorded on canvas an imaginary studio visit from Allen Tate, the fabled southern poet. The scene is one of quiet intensity, convincing in every respect. Tate, cocktail in hand, stands expectantly just inside a doorway in his khaki-colored three-button suit. Natural light from falls unevenly on the floorboards, walls, picture frames, and books that fill the composition with ordered clutter.

The space recedes through a rear doorway into a darkly shadowed interior. One discerns paintings propped here and there, and easels, and rectangles of bright light from rear windows. Nothing disturbs the picture’s perfect poise, except perhaps the fact that the visit was not real in the customary sense of the word. Tate had died, with much acclaim, two years previously.