|
|
| The First Art Newspaper on the Net |
 |
Established in 1996 |
|
Monday, February 2, 2026 |
|
| Winston Roeth returns to Ingleby Gallery for 2026 season opener |
|
|
Winston Roeth, Stones of Gold, 2025, 188 x 196.8 cm. Photo: Tom Moore.
|
EDINBURGH.- Inglebys exhibition programme for 2026 opens with an exhibition of work by the American painter Winston Roeth.
A master of edge and surface, Roeths colourfield paintings combine an apparently minimalist presentation with a maximalist viewing experience. Colour is everything, colour and light and an awareness of how paintings can command and delineate architectural space.
The paintings themselves operate within that space, changing in the light as the viewer moves around them. Roeth is an alchemist, mixing his pigments and applying them in velvety layers which reveal their secrets slowly. His compositions are distilled to this level of apparent simplicity through the most minimal ingredients. Sometimes the white of the wall becomes an active part of the painting, forming a geometric grid, at other times the picture itself is divided into a harmony of lines and colours, with the matt expanse of paint broken by shimmeringly luminous lines, while in others planes of a single colour are offset by a contradictory border: an edge on which the picture turns. In a world so accustomed to instant gratification Winston Roeths paintings require and reward an unusual level of contemplation.
At first glance Roeths painted panels of wood or slate appear very simple: flat planes of colour that look a certain way, but which shift in the changing light or as you move around them. They are exquisitely painted in layers of velvety pigment and reveal their secrets slowly: quiet combinations that play gentle tricks on the eye - simultaneously drawing the viewer into dense voids and bouncing the gaze back with a vibrant intensity. Roeths compositions are distilled to this apparent simplicity through the most minimal ingredients. Sometimes a picture is divided into grids, a geometric harmony of lines and colours, so that the matt expanse of paint is broken up by shimmeringly luminous lines in a perfect balance of light, depth and colour. Others combine planes of a single colour with a contradictory border: an edge on which the picture turns. In a world so accustomed to instant gratification Winston Roeths paintings require and reward an unusual level of contemplation.
Roeth is based in Beacon, New York State. He has exhibited extensively and his work is in many important collections, including the Museum Wiesbaden, Germany; PEAC Museum, Germany; The Albright Knox Art Gallery, USA; Colby College Museum of Art, USA; the Museum of Modern Art, NY, USA and the celebrated Panza Collection where his paintings form a site-specific installation in one of the gilded and panelled rooms of the C17th Palazzo Ducale in Sassuolo, Italy. Winston Roeth had a solo show at Ingleby Gallery in Spring 2011. Recent solo exhibitions include Speed of Light, Museum Weisbaden, Germany; an exhibition that surveyed 30 years work, Portrait without a face, Galerie Vera Munro, Germany and Fox Jensen McCrory Gallery, New Zealand.
|
|
Today's News
February 2, 2026
Jun Martínez debuts first solo exhibition in Mexico at adhesivo contemporary
Louisiana Museum unveils Basquiat's private world of the human head
British Library acquires archive of Ronald Blythe, writer and essayist
The Louvre announces temporary exhibitions for the first half of 2026
A fresh look at Saxony's emerging voices: Art Fund exhibition opens in Berlin
All Blues: Sam Nhlengethwa's jazz-infused return to New York at Goodman Gallery
A 25-year retrospective of Jessica Backhaus opens at FFF Fotografie Forum Frankfurt
In Her Place celebrates the women defining Nashville's visual arts
Shaping the lens: Santu Mofokeng and David Goldblatt unite at Zander Galerie
Yasumasa Morimura and Charles Atlas explore identity at Luhring Augustine
Giant exhibition opens in Edinburgh
Needle, thread, and resistance: Britta Marakatt-Labba's Sámi narratives arrive at Kunsthalle Mainz
Palm Springs Art Museum presents a new exhibition exploring architecture and fashion
Winston Roeth returns to Ingleby Gallery for 2026 season opener
Schomburg Center, leading authors, scholars, and artists release special book list to mark centennial
Every stroke a loud space: Ronny Delrue's decades of drawing take center stage at IKOB
Anne Hardy transforms VISUAL Carlow into a weather-responsive earthscape
Annette Hur debuts new autobiographical abstractions at Timothy Hawkinson Gallery
Chronicles from the Storm: On moral exhaustion, endurance, and the fragility of hope
Elena Asins returns to Málaga with Antigone, a stark contemporary reading of classical tragedy
New solo exhibition by Á. Birna Björnsdóttir opens at BERG Contemporary
MCA Australia's artistic program revealed
MASBEDO transforms Bologna's Oratorio into a sanctuary of sound and memory
Julia Phillips reimagines the body at the Barbican
|
|
|
|
|
Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography, Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs, Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, . |
|
|
|
Royalville Communications, Inc produces:
|
|
|
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful
|
|