September Newsletter: New Works & New Layout
We have been busy since last months newsletter. We have a bunch of new works on display but we also switched up the entire layout of the gallery. The gallery is now divided into different vignettes featuring each artists work, as well as a write up about them and their practice. It allows the viewer to truly immerse themselves into each artists work.
THE WINKEL QUARTERLY
We’re thrilled to announce the launch of our new Gallery Quarterly! ISSUE 01 / FALL 2025 is here. This seasonal edition is an extension of the gallery—something to hold, collect, and revisit. Each issue brings the spirit of our monthly email newsletter to life in print.
The theme of our first issue is WORKS ON PAPER. Paper is one of the first creative materials we encounter—whether coloring as children or sketching in our first notebooks. This edition celebrates the many ways our artists transform paper into art. The first issue is a limited edition run of 54.
NEW WORKS ON VIEW
OUTSIDE THE GALLERY
MARK YOUR CALENDARS
Fells Point Fun Festival
October 10 - October 12, 2025
What began as a festival to protect the neighborhood from development and preserve its historic integrity is now one of the city’s largest community celebrations. Across six blocks in Fell’s Point, explore tasty bites from local vendors, craft cocktails and beers, one-of-a-kind products from area artisans and energetic live music performances—all with a spectacular view of the harbor.
This year’s festival takes place October 10-12 and is FREE to enter.
RECOMMENDATIONS
What to Read
By: TJ Clark
Those Passions unpicks the nature of capitalist societies since the fifteenth century and the art produced within them. It evaluates the central politics of appearance--the building of "consumerism," the arrival of the 24-hour image-led world, the continuously changing methods of symbolic production, and the ongoing saturation of life by pictures and "data." It reveals our guilty love affair with the imagery of violence, the true nature of the "advertising" dream world, and the power and pathos of screen time.
Written across four decades, these essays focus on a line of painting and sculpture that was thought from the start to be responsive to the new condition. One key feature of the emerging "modern" was the liberation of art and politics from their previous established positions. Politics increasingly became a separate form of life, no longer so firmly allied to Church and State. Art floated free, at least partially, from the sacred age-old deference to the powerful. What art and politics would turn out to be became a question in itself; for some, the question on which art's future depended.
What to Watch: AGGIE
To celebrate the life of Agnes Gund, who recently died on September 18, we want to share this documentary about her, which is directed and produced by her daughter.
Agnes was a towering figure in the worlds of art and philanthropy, an ardent collector, advocate for arts education, founder of Studio in a School, longtime leader at the Museum of Modern Art, and creator of the Art for Justice Fund, which sought to harness art’s power toward social change.
Her legacy is immense: she not only shaped cultural institutions but also used her influence to address inequity, mass incarceration, and access to art. She will be profoundly missed.