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the early paintings of Andrew wyeth before 1940
Published by: admin 2009-01-08
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  • Charles Burchfield - Artist, Art - Charles Ephraim Burchfield::
    antique roadshow, art values, painting value, value of art, Andrew Wyeth. Max Weber. Rockwell Kent. Theodore Robinson. Norman Rockwell. Hayley Lever
    http://www.askart.com/AskART/B/charles_ephraim_burchfield/charlestype=SUMMARY&artist=24179
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    I would like information regarding the painting, The Gentleman by andrew Wyeth dating 1937
  • Lucille Wallenrod - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia::
    Judges for this competition were Isabel Bishop and Andrew Wyeth. Lucille Wallenrods Paintings were brought to my attention early in 1946.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucille_Wallenrod
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    Jackson pollock Framed Art Prints at Picasso Art::
    However, by the early 1940s his work had become completely abstract Andrew Wyeth. Cant find your Artist? Click here for a complete Alphabetical List.
    http://www.picasso-art.com/Artists/Jackson_Pollack.html
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  • Hello there With all due respect, the painting you are asking about is titled "That Gentleman" rather than "The Gentleman." Andrew Wyeth, the youngest of five children is today considered the most "collectible" of the American Realist Painters, one of the most renowned artists in history. Andrew Wyeth attended school until he was in the third grade and contracted whooping cough which made him very prone to illness from then on. His father and mother decided home schooling would be the way to go. This was in the days before home schooling was accepted by the state and that is another story. With no high school diploma, university degree, or formal training in graphics, Andrew Wyeth has had a wonderful career as an artist. Newell Convers Wyeth, Andrew's father, was also a successful artist and provided the only training Andrew ever received in graphics. His father's art can be seen in classic novels such as Treasure Island and The Last of the Mohicans. The painting "That Gentleman" belongs to the Dallas Museum of Art. It is tempura on panel 23 1/2 x 47 3/4in. "Wyeth's work often portrayed a sense of privacy, or even isolation. He concentrated on the beauty of nature near his homes in Pennsylvania and Maine. He also concentrated on particular models for subjects of his paintings. In Maine, Christina Olsen and Siri Erikson were models for many of his paintings. In Pennsylvania, Helga Testorf was the subject of "the Helga series", a total of 240 paintings and drawings. In addition to many other honors, he was elected to the National Institute of Arts and Letters in 1945, and was the first artist to receive the Congressional Gold Medal (1990). Among his most notable works are Christina's World, Wind From the Sea, Distant Thunder, Spring Fed, and That Gentleman." - Quote from Andrew Wyeth Pennsylvania Biographies http://www.geocities.com/Heartland/4547/wyeth.html The subject of the painting you are asking about is a man named Tom Clark. Talking about this painting, artist Andrew Wyeth said: Tom Clark went about the business of living in a very orderly way. He would prepare his vegetables with a deft grace, mend his clothes with care, lift the lid of a kettle seconds before it would boil over, keep his wood stove just the right temperature, place his slippers on a newspaper so as not to soil the table top. This tall, thin gentleman always referred to objects -- whether a potato, an annoying fly buzzing overhead, or a car passing by -- as "that gentleman" (Boston Museum of Fine Arts, p. 95). http://www.dallasmuseumofart.org/edu/teachingpackets/TP/LookingJourney/Artwork/LGen.htm - website of the Dallas Museum of Art Adjectives describing the painting might include resting, relaxed, weary, old, still, unmoving. - That description is also from the Dallas Museum of Art. Since I am an anthropologist, I can see that Andrew Wyeth had much of the anthropologist in him as well as a great empathy with some of his subjects. For example, the following quote demonstrates fully his dedication to and knowledge of his subjects: - "Once he is involved deeply in a work, he begins to remember daydreams, memories, and thoughts directly or indirectly pertaining to the subject matter. These he tries also to incorporate into the work. He keeps in mind the bare essentials because this also helps him become more inquisitive about the subject. This deep involvement can become so intense that he will try to become like his subject. Wyeth saturates himself with the feel, tone, and thoughts of the subject matter. Once, when doing a painting of Tom Clark which was later called That Gentleman, he shaved his head bald, dyed his skin to the color of Clark s, who was a Negro, enlarged his nostrils, and tipped his eyes with tape to look as much like his subject as possible. He did this to get a better feel and perhaps give a better portrayal of Tom Clark in That Gentleman." Quote from "Andrew Wyeth" - http://zoidal20.tripod.com/matt/ResearchAW The above article ends with: - "The time is past when one could dismiss Wyeth as nothing more then sentimental illustrator"(Hughes 77). The great expression and depth of Wyeth s paintings, specifically [That Gentleman], Winter, and Christina s World, can not be overlooked. These three works transcend far above illustration." - brackets mine As Andrew Wyeth himself said: - ""I'm involved with the people I paint. They become my friends, they're not people I paint and send home." Search - Google Terms - andrew wyeth, that gentleman If I may clarify anything, please ask. Cheers digsalot
  • Charles Hawthorne - Artist, Art - Charles Webster Hawthorne::
    was admired for the beauty of his paintings as well as his Andrew Wyeth. Milton Avery. Norman Rockwell. Martin Johnson Heade. John Whorf. Hayley Lever
    http://www.askart.com/AskART/H/charles_webster_hawthorne/charles_webster_hawthorne.aspx
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    Philadelphia Reflections: Art in Philadelphia::
    The history of art, particularly painting and sculpture, has Andrew Wyeth. Andrew Wyeth spent much of his early career doing watercolors, and then turned
    http://www.philadelphia-reflections.com/reflections.php?content=thp/art_in_phila_topic.php
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