John William Joseph Winkler
American, 1890 - 1979
He enrolled in the Mark Hopkins Art Institute and began etching in 1912. San Francisco's Chinatown and Telegraph Hill provided him with fascinating subjects for his etchings and, while on location, he drew directly on prepared plates.
Departing for Europe in 1922, Winkler worked and roamed the countryside from England to France; it would be eight years before he returned to California.
He was a member of the Chicago Society of Etchers, the Society of American Graphic Artists, the San Francisco Art Association, and an honorary member of the Printmakers Society of California. Winkler was elected an Associate in the National Academy of Design in 1936 and to full Academician in 1951.
One of the highest tributes he received was from his friend, John Taylor Arms, who proclaimed Winkler to be the "master of line," the "master of us all." In 1955, there was an exhibition of his etchings in Holland, and he had a solo exhibition in 1974 at the Achenbach Foundation.
Winkler is represented in the collections of the Achenbach Foundation, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Library of Congress, the Boston Public Library, the Metropolitan Museum, the New York Public Library, the Oakland Museum, the San Francisco Public Library and the Victoria and Albert Museum.
(http://www.askart.com/artist_bio/John_William_Joseph_Winkler/2809/John_William_Joseph_Winkler.aspx)
Person TypeIndividual
German, c. 1482 - 1539/40