Everything about Andrew Wyeth totally explained
Andrew Newell Wyeth (born
July 12,
1917) is an
American realist painter, also known as
regional art. He is one of the best-known of the
20th century and sometimes referred to as the "Painter of the People" due to his popularity with the American public. He is the son of the illustrator and artist
N. C. Wyeth, and the brother of inventor
Nathaniel Wyeth and artist
Henriette Wyeth Hurd, and the father of artist
Jamie Wyeth and Nicholas Wyeth .
Wyeth's favorite subject is the land and inhabitants around his hometown of
Chadds Ford,
Pennsylvania and those near his summer home in
Cushing,
Maine. One of the most well-known images in 20th century American art, is
Christina's World (1948), in the collection of the
Museum of Modern Art in
New York City.
Childhood/ Early career
Andrew was the youngest of the five children of N. C. and Carolyn Bockius Wyeth. He was home-tutored because of his frail health, and learned art from his father during long periods together. Both shared the same love for rural landscape, a sense of romance, and a strongly held feeling for Wyeth family history dating back to 1645 in America. Andrew started drawing at a very young age, and with his father’s patient and skillful guidance, he mastered figure study and early took to watercolor, and later learned egg tempera from brother-in-law
Peter Hurd. He studied art history on his own, admiring many masters of Renaissance and American painting, especially
Winslow Homer. Like his father, he read and appreciated the poetry of Frost and Thoreau and studied their relationship with nature. Music and movies also heightened his artistic sensitivity.
In
1937 at age twenty, he'd his first one-man exhibition of watercolors at
Macbeth Gallery in
New York City. The entire inventory of paintings quickly sold out, and Wyeth's career was launched. His style was distinctly different from his father’s—more spare, more ”dry”, and more limited in color range. He also avoided the drama of his father’s style and early on stated the belief that “the great danger of the Pyle school is picture-making.” He went on to do a little illustration in his early career but avoiding the yoke that had been held back N.C. Wyeth’s artistic freedom, Andrew charted his own direction.
Father's death 1940s
In 1940, Wyeth married Betsy James and in 1943 the Wyeths had their first child Nicholas, followed by James ("Jamie") three years later. Andrew painted well-known portraits of both Jamie and Betsy. In October 1945, Andrew Wyeth's father and his three-year-old nephew, Newell Convers Wyeth II (b. 1941), were killed when their car stalled on railroad tracks near their home and was struck by a train. Wyeth has referred to his father's death as a formative emotional event in his artistic career, in addition to a personal tragedy. It was shortly after this time that Wyeth's art consolidated into his mature and enduring style, characterized by a subdued color palette, highly realistic renderings, and the depiction of emotionally charged symbolic objects.
In 1948 Wyeth began painting Anna and Karl Kuerner, neighbors of the Wyeths in Chadds Ford. It was at the Olsen farm in 1948 that he painted
Christina’s World, his famous image of crippled Christina Olsen yearning for her home. Like the Olsons in Maine, the Kuerners and their farm became one of Wyeth's most important subjects for nearly 30 years. Ironically, the Kuerner's farm is just a few yards from the railroad tracks where N.C. Wyeth died. The Kuerner's farm is now available to tour through the Brandywine River Museum as is the N.C. Wyeth home and studio.
Wyeth stated about the Kuerner Farm, “I didn’t think it a picturesque place. It just excited me, purely abstractly and purely emotionally”.
Mature career
Dividing his time between Pennsylvania and Maine, Wyeth has maintained a relatively consistent realist painting style for over fifty years. He has tended to gravitate to several identifiable landscape subjects and models, to which he'd return repeatedly over a period of decades. In 1958, Andrew and Betsy Wyeth purchased and restored “The Mill”, a group of 18th century buildings which appeared often in his work, including
Night Sleeper (1979). His solitary walks are the primary means of inspiration for his landscapes. He develops an extraordinary intimacy with the land and sea and strives for a spiritual understanding based on history and unspoken emotion. He typically creates dozens of studies on a subject in pencil or loosely brushed watercolor before executing a finished painting, either in watercolor,
drybrush (a watercolor style in which the water is squeezed from the brush), or egg
tempera.
When Christina Olsen died in the winter of 1969, Wyeth refocused his artistic attention upon Siri Erickson, capturing her naked innocence in
Indian Summer (1970). It was a prelude to the Helga paintings.
Helga pictures
In 1986, extensive coverage was given to the revelation of a series of 247 studies of Wyeth's neighbour, the Prussian-born Helga Testorf, painted over the period 1971-1985 without the knowledge of either Wyeth's wife or John Testorf, her husband. Helga is a musician, baker, and caregiver, and friend of the Wyeths. She met Wyeth when she was attending to Karl Kuerner. She had never modeled before but quickly became comfortable with the long periods of posing during which she was observed and painted in intimate detail. The Helga pictures are not an obvious psychological study of the subject but more of an extensive study of her physical landscape set within Wyeth's customary landscapes. She is nearly always unsmiling and passive, yet within those deliberate limitations, Wyeth manages to convey subtle qualities of character and mood, as he does in many of his best portraits. This extensive study of one subject studied in differing contexts and emotional states is unique in American art.
In 1986, millionaire Leonard E. B. Andrews purchased the entire collection, preserving it intact.
The works were exhibited at the
National Gallery of Art in 1987, and in a coast-to-coast tour.The Helga works are now owned by a private Japanese interest, which has agreed to allow additional exhibitions. In March 2002, Wyeth painted
Gone, his last Helga picture, and it joined the collection on recent tours between 2002-2006.
Critical reaction
Wyeth's art has long been controversial. As a
representational artist, Wyeth's paintings have sharply contrasted with the prevailing trend of
abstraction that gained currency in American art in the middle of the 20th century.
Museum exhibitions of Wyeth's paintings have set attendance records, but many art critics have been heavily critical of his work.
Peter Schjeldahl, art critic for
The Village Voice, derided his paintings as "Formulaic stuff not very effective even as illustrational 'realism'". Hence the most common criticisms are that Wyeth's art verges on illustration, and that his predominantly rural subject matter is heavily weighted with sentiment.
Admirers of Wyeth's art believe that his paintings, in addition to sometimes displaying overt beauty, contain strong emotional currents, symbolic content, and underlying abstraction. Most observers of Wyeth's art agree that he's exceptionally skilled at handling the mediums of watercolor and egg tempera (which uses egg yolk as a medium). Except for early experimentations, Wyeth has avoided using traditional oil paints. His masterful control of understated color and foreboding shadow lets the simplest subjects illuminate the canvas. Wyeth is acutely observant of sound and there's often a stillness in his art as if he's stopping to listen to the most delicate sounds—water dripping, quiet breathing, changing weather—as is implied in many paintings including
Distant Thunder (1961) and
Spring Fed (1967).
Museum collections
Andrew Wyeth is in the collections of most major American museums, including The
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the
Whitney Museum of American Art and the
Museum of Modern Art in New York City; the
Smithsonian American Art Museum, the
National Gallery of Art; the
Arkansas Art Center in Little Rock; and the
White House, in Washington, DC. Especially large collections of Wyeth's art are in the
Brandywine River Museum in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania; the
Farnsworth Art Museum in
Rockland, Maine; and the
Greenville County Museum of Art in
Greenville, South Carolina. A major retrospective of Andrew Wyeth's work occurred at the
Philadelphia Museum of Art(External Link
) from March 29, 2006 - July 16, 2006.
Honors and awards
Most recently, Wyeth received the 2007
National Medal of Arts. Wyeth has been the recipient of numerous honorary degrees. In 1963, Andrew Wyeth became the first painter to receive the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, which was conferred by President
John F. Kennedy. In 1977, he became the first American artist since
John Singer Sargent elected to the
Académie des Beaux-Arts. In 1980, Wyeth became the first living American artist to be elected to Britain's
Royal Academy. In 1987 Wyeth received a D.F.A. from
Bates College. On
November 9,
1988, Wyeth was the recipient of the
Congressional Gold Medal, the highest civilian honor bestowed by the United States legislature.
Influence on the arts
Wyeth was often referenced by cartoonist
Charles M. Schulz (a longtime admirer) in the comic strip
Peanuts. In one strip the character
Snoopy was presented with a bill for "psychiatric help"
20 cents and states "I refuse to sell my Andrew Wyeth". In another strip, Snoopy's prized
Van Gogh painting is burned in a fire, and he replaces it with an Andrew Wyeth.
Tom Duffield, the production designer for the American remake of
The Ring, drew inspiration from Wyeth's paintings for the look of the film.
M. Night Shyamalan based his movie
The Village on paintings by Andrew Wyeth.
The Village was filmed in Chadds Ford not far from Wyeth's studio. Director
Philip Ridley has stated that his 1990 film
The Reflecting Skin is heavily inspired by the paintings of Andrew Wyeth in its visual style.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Andrew Wyeth'.
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