b. 1954, Manchester, UK
Lives and works in London, UK
Paul Winstanley is best known for his delicate paintings from photographs, which pull beauty from quotidian environs with tactile precision. Wavering between photographic realism and painterly softness, Winstanley’s works call into question the quiet psychology of public and private spaces.
Born in Manchester in 1954, Paul Winstanley lives and works in London. His work has been included in exhibitions since the 1970s, and over the past two decades it has been shown throughout the United Kingdom, Germany, France, and the United States. Recent solo exhibitions include The Persistence of the Sublime at Galerie Vera Munro, Hamburg, Germany (2023); My Heart's in the Highlands at Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York, NY (2022); After the War the Renaissance at 1301PE, Los Angeles, CA (2020); Faith After Saenredam And Other Paintings at Kerlin Gallery, Dublin, Ireland (2017); Art School at Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York, NY (2015); Everyone Thinks This is Nowhere at Alan Cristea, London, UK (2012); and Paintings 1989-2007 at Artspace, Auckland, New Zealand (2008).
His work has also been featured in numerous group shows, including like the light at the beginning of the world at Kerlin Gallery, Dublin, Ireland (2024); A Century of the Artist's Studio: 1920-2020 at Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK (2022); Winter Darkness at 1301PE, Los Angeles, CA (2021); Realitatscheck at Kunstraum, Potsdam, Germany (2019); Summer Show at the Royal Academy, London, UK (2018); Geometrics at Andreas Binder Gallery, Munich, Germany (2017); Conversations at the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland (2015); Art and Existence at Esbjerg Kunstmuseum, Esbjerg, Denmark (2013); and Window to the World at Museo Cantonale d'arte and Museum d’arte, Lugano, Italy (2012). His first retrospective was held at the Auckland Art Space in New Zealand in 2008 and was accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue. Winstanley's work is represented in numerous public and private collections, including the collections of The Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin; Tate Gallery, Great Britain; New York City Public Library, New York and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.
All images © Paul Winstanley.
Galleria Six is proud to announce the first presentation in Italy of Paul Winstanley. Schooled in the orthodoxies of abstract Modernism, Winstanley spent a decade after college establishing a new visual language, combining the tenets of minimalism with the pictorialism of photography. The role of the viewer is central to an understanding of Winstanley's paintings and his occasional use of the figure echoes that active passivity. Engrossed, they watch, look, wait, smoke, phone, text.
Paul Winstanley will be present at Karsten Schubert on November 21st from 6-8 pm for the launch and signing of his most recent publication of Art School. Filled with photographs of unpopulated studios, Paul Winstanley’s exploration of British art schools highlights their importance at a time when the art school system’s existence is more fraught than ever.
Paul Winstanley is to be included in "Lifelike", a traveling exhibition curated by Siri Engberg. Is it real? Lifelike invites a close examination of artworks based on commonplace objects and situations, which are startlingly realistic, often playful, and sometimes surreal. This international group exhibition features artists variously using scale, unusual materials, and sly contextual devices to reveal the manner in which their subjects’ “authenticity” is manufactured. Avoiding the brand-name flashiness embraced by 1960s Pop and the slick urban scenes introduced at that time by the Photorealists, the artists in Lifelike investigate the quieter side of the quotidian, choosing potentially overlooked items or moments as subject matter: a paper bag, an eraser, an apple core, a waiting room, an afternoon nap. They also favor a handmade, labor-intensive practice rather than technological enhancements. The resulting works—including painting, sculpture, photography, drawing, and video—transform the ordinary into something beguiling, loaded with narrative and metaphor, and imbued with an arresting sense of humanity. Lifelike showcases works from the 1960s to the present by more than 55 artists, including Vija Celmins, Keith Edmier, Fischli and Weiss, Robert Gober, Alex Hay, Kaz Oshiro, Charles Ray, Sam Taylor-Wood, and Ai Weiwei. Catalogue forthcoming in February 2012.
The century flows through the show like an underground river. Egon Schiele sets up his drawing box in the office of a prisoner of war camp in 1916. Ten years later, Brancusi is labouring through the dark night in his Paris attic. In films, photographs and paintings, the studio edges in at every turn. It is a place of cigarette butts and congealing palettes, the masking tape running out as the daylight fades too fast and the leg of the drawing table needs propping yet again. It is a place where the clock ticks with reproachful violence as no work gets done in Darren Almond’s live feed of his studio. Where the canvases are still worryingly bare, in an exquisite tempera painting by Andrew Grassie (perfect paradox). Or the paintings have all gone, along with the students, in Paul Winstanley’s paintings of deserted art schools, haunted by telltale hints of colours the decorators have tried to cover over with whitewash.
There is a clear affinity between the work of Paul Winstanley and Pieter Saenredam, a painter who flourished during the Dutch Golden Age in the 17th century. It has been suggested that he was motivated more by his passion for architecture than by his faith. Whatever his motivation, these qualities give his work a startlingly modern appearance when you encounter it in its art historical context in galleries. You can see its appeal for Winstanley, who has long pursued a form of painting that incorporates aspects of both photographic representation and minimalism. The key work in his new show at the Kerlin is his recreation, or re-imagination, of a lost painting of Mariakerk by Saenredam. Winstanley set about approximating it by referring to a surviving, precise preparatory sketch.
British artist Paul Winstanley’s “Art School” paintings, now on view at the Mitchell-Innes & Nash gallery in Manhattan, take their inspiration from his own photographs of art-student studios left empty for the summer months. Though imitative of photographs, these delicately realist works are full of painterly depth and texture. Plush grays and downy whites lend the scenes a soft, comfortable, well-worn feeling; the studios are empty and bare, monastic even, but never austere. Signs of craft and toil mark the floors, walls, tables, and chairs. In one piece, a bright orange surface—wall or canvas?—is so close it is almost menacing, an explosion of energy cutting off our view of the serene studio beyond. Through July 19 at Mitchell-Innes & Nash, 534 West 24th Street, New York.
Paintings based on photographs often deaden the vivacity of the original image. But British artist Paul Winstanley proves that this needn't be the case.
Paul Winstanley photorealistically paints nondescript places and anonymous figures—usually looking out of the picture and away from the viewer—in a soft-focus manner la Gerhard Richter.
For the past three decades, British artist Paul Winstanley has been painting the future past--that utopian architectural imaginary of the postwar years concretized in a range of quasi-public/quasi-private milieus, from the airport to the hospital--making only the most incremental variations in his address of the subject matter from one show to the next.
The Vermeer of corporate interiors, Winstanley is back with his first New York show in more than a decade, a quiet octet of oils on linen. Recurring subjects include a floor-to-ceiling glass wall, curtained with translucent panels through which trees glimmer, and a chrome walkway lit by pearly fluorescent fixtures.
Known for his paintings based on photographs of uninhabited interiors and landscapes, British painter Paul Winstanley has been doing basically the same thing for a long time.