Scratch and Tear: Works by Winifred McNeill
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About the Exhibition
Kean University Galleries and Collections is pleased to announce a solo exhibition in the Nancy Dryfoos Gallery, Scratch and Tear: Works by Winifred McNeill, on view September 8, 2026 through December 4, 2026. The opening reception for the artist will be held on Tuesday, October 6 from 5:30 – 7:30 P.M. in the Nancy Dryfoos Gallery. The Nancy Dryfoos Gallery, in the Nancy Thompson Learning Commons, is open to the public Monday through Friday 10:00 A.M. – 4:00 P.M.
Winifred McNeill’s work almost always starts with drawing. McNeill often draws on unexpected and demanding surfaces. In Center of the Universe, graphite is applied to the concave side of a seashell, responding to the surface irregularities. Metal pipe tees push out of the wall in Industrial Strength, revealing the anatomy of their spaces, which are coated with plaster to create a drawing surface bearing small graphite renderings of the exterior of the human body. McNeill’s feat of conquering material is matched by her equally challenging choice of subject matter: Hands, private parts, and perfect circles. Her preparatory ink drawings for the limited-edition letterpress book The Helen Fragments flesh out the life of Helen of Troy beyond her beauty and abduction using passages from Homer’s epic The Iliad. In a suite of prints made at the Brodsky Center, McNeill addresses drawing in a different way, through the manipulation of the paper substrate by the body. The print becomes a napkin that absorbs the imprint of lipstick, a veiled surface swept away by a tear, or a hole torn by a fingernail.
Selected Works
About the Artist
Winifred McNeill works and lives in New Jersey and received her MFA from Queens College, CUNY and her BFA from Boston University. She is Professor Emeritus in the Art Department at Kean Jersey City, formerly New Jersey City University, and was previously the Curator of Education at the Jersey City Museum. While living in Rome, she taught drawing and painting at St. Stephen's School. She has shown her work with Ivy Brown Gallery in New York City as well as other national and international venues. Her work is held in private and public collections including Rutgers University, the New York Public Library, the University of Delaware Rare Books and Special Collections, and Columbia University Rare Books Department. She has participated in numerous residencies including at the European Ceramic Work Center in Oisterwijk, Netherlands; the Virginia Center for Creative Arts, the Brodsky Center at PAFA, the Millay Colony for the Arts, and Yaddo.