Overview

Winfred Rembert unique oeuvre is executed in carved, tooled, and painted leather, a craft the artist learned from fellow inmate during seven years of hard labor in the Georgia prison system. Rembert’s deeply personal artworks foreground truths about the aftermath of slavery and the persistence of racial injustice in America, while also celebrating the people and places of the Black communities in which he lived.

Winfred Rembert (1945-2021) was born in Americus, Georgia and grew up in nearby Cuthbert— a rural railroad town located in the southwest region of the state, once at the center of the Deep South’s plantation economy. Living in Cuthbert during the era of Jim Crow, Rembert was exposed to the exploitative practices of the sharecropping system at a young age. Spending much of his childhood alongside family members working in the fields, Rembert received a limited education. Despite the infrequency of his attendance, a dedicated teacher by the name of Miss Prather recognized Rembert’s artistic talent and encouraged him to express his creativity through drawing.

 

As a teenager, Rembert was deeply influenced by the burgeoning Civil Rights Movement in Americus, Georgia, and his active participation led to confrontations with law enforcement. In 1965, while attending a peaceful protest which was attacked by white antagonists, he fled from the assailants in a stolen car, and was subsequently arrested for the theft. In 1967, still incarcerated while awaiting charges, Rembert escaped from jail. Following his ensuing capture by an angry white mob, Rembert survived a near-lynching. For the next seven years of his life, he was transferred to multiple penitentiaries within the Georgia prison system, enduring taxing physical labor while working on various chain gangs— a harrowing experience that would later prove central to the narrative of his extraordinary art.

 

Rembert learned how to tool and craft leather from a fellow prisoner—the technique he would later use to share his story with the world. Following his release from prison, in 1974, Rembert married Patsy Gammage and they eventually settled in New Haven, Connecticut. At the age of fifty-one, with his wife’s encouragement, he began a full-time artistic practice. Combining his mastery of leather working with his skilled draftsmanship he created a unique and prolific body of autobiographical paintings. Rembert continued to make art for nearly twenty-five years, before his death on March 31, 2021, at the age of 75.

 

Over the course of his career, Rembert embraced a variety of styles and pictorial strategies. His works range from purely illustrative to verging on the abstract. In many of the early paintings, the materiality of his media is immediately apparent. In such works, Rembert rendered his figures in muted tones to compliment the natural color of the leather backgrounds. In other works, bright- colored pigments cover the entire surface of densely packed compositions.

 

Recalling the achievements of African American figurative masters such as Jacob Lawrence, Hale Woodruff, and Horace Pippin, Rembert’s deeply personal artworks foreground truths about the aftermath of slavery and the persistence of racial injustice in America. They also capture moments of joy and celebrate people and places of the artist’s community.

Biography

Born in 1945 in Americus, Georgia, USA

Died in 2021 in New Haven, Connecticut, USA

 

Solo Exhibitions

 

2023

 Hauser & Wirth in collaboration with Fort Gansevoort, ‘Winfred Rembert: All of Me’, New York, NY

2022

 James Barron Art, ‘Winfred Rembert: Memory is Alive’, Kent, CT 

2021

 Fort Gansevoort, ‘Winfred Rembert: 1945 – 2021’, New York, NY

2018 - 2019

 The Butler Institute of American Art, ‘Southern Roots: The Paintings of Winfred Rembert’, Youngstown, OH

2017

 The Muskegon Museum of Arts, ‘Southern Roots: The Paintings of Winfred Rembert’, Muskegon, MI

2016

 Catamounts Arts, ‘Winfred Rembert: An Artful Response’, St Johnsbury, VT

2015

 New Haven Museum, ‘Winfred Rembert: Amazing Grace’, New Haven, CT

2013 - 2014

 Danforth Art Museum, ‘Winfred Rembert: Beyond Memory’, Framingham, MA

2013

 Flint Institute of Arts, ‘Winfred Rembert: Amazing Grace’, Flint, MI

   Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts, ‘Winfred Rembert: Amazing Grace’, Montgomery, AL
   Tillou Fine Art, ‘Winfred Rembert’, New York, NY
2012  Hudson River Museum, ‘Winfred Rembert: Amazing Grace’, Yonkers, NY, Greenville
   County Museum of Art, ‘Winfred Rembert: Amazing Grace’, Greenville, SC
2011  The Citadelle Art Foundation, ‘Winfred Rembert: Amazing Grace’, Canadian, TX
2010  Adelson Galleries, ‘Winfred Rembert: Memories of My Youth’, New York, NY
1998  York Square Cinema, New Haven, CT

 

Group Exhibitions

 

2024

 Galerie Marguo, ‘WRONGED’, Paris, France

2023

 Blum&Poe, ‘Pictures Girls Make’, Los Angeles, CA

 

 Southampton Arts Center, ‘Change Agents: Women Collectors Shaping the Art World, Southampton, NY

 

 Spanierman Modern, ‘On View’, New York, NY 

 

 371 Broadway, ‘Petrucci Family Foundation Collection Tibeca Showcase, New York, NY

 

 National Gallery of Art, ‘The Interior Life: Recent Acquisition, Washington, D.C

2022 - 2023

 Hudson River Museum, ‘Order / Reorder: Experiments with Collections’, Yonkers, NY

2022

 Florence Griswold Museum, ‘Dream & Memories’, Old Lyme, CT

 

 North Carolina Museum of Art, ‘Start Taling: Contemporary Art from the Collection of Hedy Fischer and Randy Shull, Raleigh, NC

 

 22 London, ‘Mirror Mirror’, Asheville, NC

2021 - 2022

 Adelson Galleries, ‘Winfred & Mitchell Rembert: Father and Son”, New York, NY

 

 Greenville County Museum of Art, Greenville, ‘Soul Deep: African-American Masterworks’,SC

2020 - 2021

 Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, ‘Protest and Promise: Selections from the Contemporary Art Collection 1963 – 2019’, Hartford, CT

2015

 Adelson Galleries, ‘Fall Exhibition: Five Artists, Jacob Collins, Federico Uribe, Winfred Rembert, Andrew Stevovich, Jamie Wyeth’, New York, NY

2002

 Kresge Gallery, ‘Willie Birch and Winfred Rembert (African   American Series Exhibition 1), Ramapo College, Mahwah, NJ

2000

 Yale University Art Gallery, ‘Southern Exposure: Works by Winfred Rembert and Hale Woodruff, New Haven CT

 

Grants, Awards and Honors

 

2022

 Pulitzer Prize winner for Biography/Autobiography

   Art in Literature: The Mary Lynn Kotz Award winner
2016  United States Artists Barr Fellowship
2015  Honored by Equal Justice Initiative
2011

 ‘Winfred Rembert Day’ declared in Cuthbert, Georgia

 

Public Collections

 

Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, TX
Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH
Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA
Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR
Flint Institute of the Arts, Flint, MI
Florence Griswold Museum, Old Lyme, CT
Georgia Museum of Art, University of Georgia, Athens, GA Glenstone, Potomac, MD
Greenville County Museum of Art, Greenville, SC
High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA
Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH
Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, NY
Legacy Museum, Equal Justice Initiative, Montgomery, AL
Lucas Museum of Narrative Art, Los Angeles, CA
Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI
Minneapolis Institute of Art, Minneapolis, MN
Muskegon Museum of Art, Youngstown, OH
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
Richard M. Ross Museum of Art, Wesleyan University, Delaware, OH Smithsonian Museum of American Art, Washington, D.C.
Speed Art Museum, Louisville, KY
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT
Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT

Works
Video
Press