The Gallery at Windsor

The Gallery at Windsor A private contemporary art gallery in Vero Beach, Florida.

A special dinner celebrating art and design at Windsor on the gallery veranda. Décor inspired by a set of fabulous print...
04/29/2026

A special dinner celebrating art and design at Windsor on the gallery veranda. Décor inspired by a set of fabulous prints by Rana Begum currently on display at The Gallery at Windsor.

: “Reflection” on display at  through May 8, 2026. Curated by , Chief Curator of the  in Savannah.

Photos by
Tabletop décor by

Artwork:
Rana Begum
*No. 860 Prints*, 2019
Sixteen etchings with chine Collé on Somerset and Canson Mi-Teintes paper
32.4 x 27.3 cm (each). From an edition of 20.
Available framed or unframed.

These days, I’m sadly able to glide through most exhibitions without a scratch. Skimming wall text, glancing from piece ...
04/01/2026

These days, I’m sadly able to glide through most exhibitions without a scratch. Skimming wall text, glancing from piece to piece—I’m rarely arrested by art. But Rana Begum’s “Reflection” shattered every one of these bad habits. I found myself circling back to certain pieces again and again, obsessing over the ways they shapeshifted before my eyes. Begum’s artworks are dazzling displays of technical skill and conceptual originality, but what is most impressive about them has less to do with the pieces themselves and more to do with the experience of standing before them.

Excerpted from Justin Duyao’s review of Rana Begum: Reflection for

: “Reflection” is on display at  through May 8, 2026. Curated by , Chief Curator of the in Savannah.

Open to the public by appointment.

See the news link in our bio for full article.

Installation photography by 

Standing sentry in the Gallery’s vestibule is this mesmerizing mesh tower by London-based British-Bangladeshi artist  Ra...
03/26/2026

Standing sentry in the Gallery’s vestibule is this mesmerizing mesh tower by London-based British-Bangladeshi artist

Rana Begum uses light, space, and color to create transformative artworks that are completed by the viewer’s experience of them. Originating at the and recontextualized for , this exhibition is Begum’s first museum survey in the United States, uniting series of works made over the course of her career. This selection demonstrates the breadth of her practice, highlighting how she expands on legacies of abstraction, Minimalism, and Op art through a contemporary global lens.

Curated by , Chief Curator of the SCAD Museum of Art.

Open to the public by appointment.

Artwork:
No. 1600 Mesh, 2026
paint, galvanized steel mesh, stone slab
Edition of 3 ( #1/3)
77 x 12 x 17 in.
(196 x 31 x 45 cm)

Photo by

One Fine Show: Rana Begum’s “Reflection” at the Gallery at Windsor in Florida“Here, the artist challenges traditional mi...
03/21/2026

One Fine Show: Rana Begum’s “Reflection” at the Gallery at Windsor in Florida
“Here, the artist challenges traditional minimalism, engaging with form and material through the delicate manipulation of light, color, and space.”

Read entire article written by Dan Duray for at the news link in our bio.

01/23/2026

The Gallery at Windsor is excited to be opening “Rana Begum: Reflection” at a special Private View on Saturday, January 24.

Showcasing works created by throughout the past ten years of her career, “Reflection” offers a moment of tranquility, inviting viewers to contemplate their own perception as they interact with the works on view.

“Reflection” is curated by SCAD Museum of Art chief curator Daniel S. Palmer.

On view through May 8, 2026. Visit the link in our bio for more details.

Edited by Lee Pretious
Rana Begum studio footage – Lee Pretious
SCAD footage – Oresti Trsonopoulos

Windsor footage – Nick Verola .media

With thanks to Rana Begum and Daniel S. Palmer and
Thanks also to for production oversight.

The Windsor Charitable Foundation is pleased to announce that The Gallery at Windsor has raised $7,000 in donations made...
05/01/2025

The Windsor Charitable Foundation is pleased to announce that The Gallery at Windsor has raised $7,000 in donations made by visitors to this year’s exhibition by leading British painters Christopher Le Brun and Charlotte Verity.

Each season, The Gallery at Windsor is open to the public by appointment. While there is no admission to enter, exhibition visitors may support the Foundation with a suggested donation of $15. Each year, the donations collected are designated to support local arts education. This year’s recipient is the Laura Riding Jackson Foundation (LRJF), a local literary nonprofit offering writers’ workshops for all ages, poetry festivals, and youth summer camps.

As part of this special collaboration, students ranging in age from 7 to 17 participated in an Ekphrastic Poetry workshop in the Gallery. Led by the LRJF’s teachers, the students crafted original poems inspired by the exhibition works. On April 16, students and their family members attended The Gallery’s Finissage, a celebration at the closing of the exhibition, where they recited their poems in front of more than 65 guests. The LRJF Board was also on hand for the official check presentation.

Visit https://bit.ly/4jZvRgM for full press release.

Photography by Verola Studio

“Eliot and Larkin resonate in different ways, and there are many others who are fundamental to my feeling for art. My re...
04/08/2025

“Eliot and Larkin resonate in different ways, and there are many others who are fundamental to my feeling for art. My reading of John Clare’s Nest poems is an example of the above. Reading Clare, I almost identify with the boy who, having a sense (carefully developed by him during the few years of his boyhood) that a bird’s nest is nearby, he finds his way through an almost impenetrable thicket to find it. Once there, he is very moved by what he finds despite knowing what to expect. His description is tender and respectful of his subject, his writing is full of wonder and curiosity. It is very precise about what he sees, but also about the search. Even so, as readers, we know that his is not just about the bird nesting. What he describes is how it feels to make a painting. At the heart of it is the search for and expression of something precious and fragile, guarded and hard to find. But if approached in the same speculative way, a form accrues which becomes whole, complete and with its own sort of strength.”

“My Nest was painted outside in winter looking towards the boundary of our home which was made up of a tangled mass of thorny stems above the garden wall. This perhaps, is the most obvious link to poetry in this group of work, but the insights, held within many other poems by a range of authors, resonate as I work. They set a standard – a very high one!”

Excerpted from Zadie Loft's interview for The London Magazine with Charlotte Verity when discussing how poetry influences Verity’s creative process.

Artwork:
Charlotte Verity
My Nest, 2016-17
Oil on canvas
34 7/8 x 43 1/4 in, 88.5 x 110 cm
Courtesy Albertz Benda, New York

Charlotte Verity said:"Mysteriously, when the offer came, the timing felt right. The work might have appeared too diverg...
03/22/2025

Charlotte Verity said:
"Mysteriously, when the offer came, the timing felt right. The work might have appeared too divergent at earlier points in our career, but now it felt not only possible to make a show with some coherence, but an interesting one – not least, for ourselves. Having guarded our independence hitherto, we were curious to see what the paintings would look like side by side and prepared to take a risk. The unpredictable element was exciting. But when finally the paintings were in place, the show felt settled and harmonious. There was more in common than we had realised."

Christopher Le Brun said:
"Nature’s there, but through painted means, through light and space and colour, atmosphere and distance. It’s true that we use different methods or approaches such as, say, close observation versus imagination but there are shared values too. For example, there is a reluctance to overprescribe, preferring to invite the viewer, rather than coerce them. I don’t believe either of us works without (in the metaphorical sense of the word) a certain distancing and Charlotte is careful to approach content obliquely."

Excerpted from an interview with Zadie Loft and Christopher Le Brun and Charlotte Verity for The London Magazine.

Visit https://bit.ly/4gXJOKh to see the full article.

Image:
Charlotte Verity
Buds, 2020
Oil on canvas
35 1/2 × 59 1/4 in | 90.3 x 150.5 cm
Courtesy Albertz Benda, New York

On view at The Gallery at Windsor until April 25, 2025, "Left Hand, Right Hand," is a joint exhibition of recent works b...
02/27/2025

On view at The Gallery at Windsor until April 25, 2025, "Left Hand, Right Hand," is a joint exhibition of recent works by Christopher Le Brun and Charlotte Verity.

Since meeting in 1974 at the Slade School of Fine Art, London, and marrying in 1979, Le Brun and Verity have developed a rich artistic dialogue arising from years of shared experience, yet which is expressed by distinct painterly sensibilities. Le Brun’s work is led by his imagination, revealing a commitment to the essential pleasure of painting for its own sake, its processes and physicality. He is a master of color and touch. By contrast, Verity’s lucid compositions, born from hours of close observation and intense looking, distil a precise yet capacious vision of the world.

Curated by Robin Vousden, the exhibition provides a rare opportunity to see these two major British painters side by side, as they exhibit together for the first time in the USA.

The Gallery at Windsor is open to the public by appointment. Visit https://bit.ly/4hw2BNV for details on public opening times and how to reserve a docent-led tour.

"Left Hand, Right Hand," is presented in collaboration with Albertz Benda.

Installation photography by Aric Attas Creative

Married Masters of Abstraction Open Rare Joint Show in Florida"Left Hand, Right Hand" is a moving, bifurcated show, divi...
02/19/2025

Married Masters of Abstraction Open Rare Joint Show in Florida

"Left Hand, Right Hand" is a moving, bifurcated show, divided into two rooms, each artist claiming one. The split seems to mirror their real-life strategy of separated practices. Le Brun and Verity requested separate interviews, reluctant to go too far into reflections on the other’s work. "We did discuss the possibility of mixing work," says Le Brun, "but they have slightly different atmosphere, different tone, and the paintings cumulatively are more coherent." As an example, he proffers that his wife sometimes depicts the same plant a season apart. "You need those two together," he explains. "If you put one of my paintings alongside, you immediately break the narrative."

Excerpted from Morgan Becker’s feature for artnet

Visit https://bit.ly/4hHKhBj to see the full article.

Address

3125 Windsor Boulevard
Vero Beach, FL
32963

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