|
|
|
Andrew Wyeth Andrew Newell
Wyeth (born July 12, 1917) is an
American realist painter, one of
the best-known of the 20th
century. He is sometimes
referred to as the "Painter of
the People" due to his
popularity with the American
public. Wyeth's favorite subject
is Andrew Wyeth
is the son of Newell Convers
Wyeth, a famous American
illustrator and artist. The
youngest of five children,
Andrew Wyeth was home-tutored
and learned art from his father.
In 1937 at age twenty, Wyeth had
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. In 1945
Andrew Wyeth's father and his
three-year-old nephew 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.
A
particularly controversial
episode in Wyeth's career
surrounded a body of work Wyeth
painted of Helga Testorf, a
model he met through the Kuerner
family in Chadds Ford. Wyeth
began painting Helga in 1971 and
for nearly fifteen years she was
one of Wyeth's most important
models. Unlike his other
subjects, however, Wyeth kept
the vast majority of his Helga
works a secret from everyone,
including his wife Betsy. He
revealed the Helga pictures to
Betsy in 1985, and arranged a
sale of the paintings to Leonard
Andrews, a private investor, the
following year. Andrews arranged
a publicity blitz that attracted
major museums to exhibit the
artwork. Enticed by the
suggestion of a secret love
affair between Wyeth and Helga,
national news media featured the
story of Wyeth's secret cache of
art. Following the museum
exhibitions, Andrews sold the
works to an anonymous Japanese
industrialist in 1990 reportedly
for a substantial profit. Some
curators felt that their museums
were used to enhance the value
of the art prior to the sale.
Some art critics thought that
Wyeth and his wife had
fabricated the entire story of
the secret cache of paintings.
Others simply admired the art.
After the paintings' sale to the
anonymous Japanese industrialist
in 1990, the paintings were
frequently exhibited at museums
in the U.S. and Japan. The
paintings were resold in early
December, 2005 to an American
buyer, who may break the
collection up for individual
sale. Andrew Wyeth
is in the collection 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; and the Smithsonian
American Art Museum, the
National Gallery of Art, in 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 of Art
in Rockland, Maine, and the
Greenville County Museum of Art
in Greenville, South Carolina. A
major retrospective of Andrew
Wyeth's work will be at the
Philadelphia Museum of Art[1]
from March 29, 2006 - July 16,
2006. 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. In 1990, he was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal of Honor by President George H. W. Bush.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
|
|
Send mail to
webmaster@artiqueonline.com with questions or comments about this web site.
|