Carl Winter
Carl Winter (10 January 1906–21 May 1966) was a British art historian and museum curator. He worked at the Victoria & Albert Museum's collection of English watercolours and miniature portraits before moving to the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge in 1946 following the end of World War II.[1][2]
Winter was born in Melbourne, the son of Carl Winter and his wife Ethel (née Hardy). He was educated and Xavier College and Newman College, University of Melbourne. He came to England in 1928 and attended Exeter College, Oxford.
He married Theodora (née Barlow) in 1936; they had two sons and a daughter, but were divorced in 1953.
He was appointed as an Assistant Keeper in the Departments of Engraving, Illustration and Design, and of Paintings, at the Victoria & Albert Museum 1931, where he worked with Basil Long, leading the department after Long's death in 1936. He was appointed as Deputy Keeper at the V&A in 1945, but moved to become Director and Morley Curator at the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge in 1946, and also a fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, where he remained until his death in 1966. He published Elizabethan Miniatures in 1943, and The British School of Miniature Portrait Painters in 1948.
Along with Patrick Trevor-Roper and Peter Wildeblood, Winter gave evidence to the Wolfenden Committee, whose report led in 1967 to the decriminalization of sex between adult male homosexuals.[3][4] He gave evidence anonymously as "Mr White".[5] His testimony to the Committee has been portrayed on-screen in the BBC dramatisation, Consenting Adults.
References
- ↑ Obituary of Carl Winter, Victoria and Albert Museum, citing an obituary in The Times newspaper.
- ↑ Mid-20th century consolidation: Louis Clarke & Carl Winter, The Fitzwilliam Museum
- ↑ Matt Houlbrook (15 October 2006). Queer London: Perils And Pleasures in the Sexual Metropolis, 1918-1957. University of Chicago Press. p. 255. ISBN 978-0-226-35462-0. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
- ↑ Jeffrey Weeks (10 September 2007). The World We Have Won: The Remaking of Erotic and Intimate Life. Taylor & Francis. p. 53. ISBN 978-0-415-42200-0. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
- ↑ Patrick Higgins (1996), Heterosexual dictatorship, London: Fourth Estate, pp. 41–44, ISBN 1857023552, 1857023552
- ‘WINTER, Carl’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2015; online edn, Oxford University Press, 2014 ; online edn, April 2014 accessed 24 Oct 2015
- Carl Winter, Trinity College Chapel