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Wyeth: Andrew Wyeth
built 815 days ago
In October 1945 Andrew Wyeth's father and his three-year-old grandson 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.
Helga Testorf, neighbor to Andrew Wyeth, sat for over 240 works produced by the noted American Artist. These works span fourteen years beginning in 1971. The changing seasons, and the changes in Helga, were all captured in the famous Helga Pictures. Helga was a German immigrant to Pennsylvania. Her family worked for Wyeth's neighbor Karl Kuener.
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Love in the Afternoon The son of the famous illustrator, N.C. Wyeth, young Andrew learned his craft first-hand from his father, as he was home-schooled as a result of poor health. Favoring the medium of watercolor and egg tempera, his "dry brush" method has endured from his days as a child learning from his famous father. Through the decades, his popularity has become incalculable and his accolades, countless. Andrew Wyeth is truly a national treasure.
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Impressed by the talent of Henriette and Carolyn, N.C. Wyeth had begun instructing them in drawing at an early age. Andrew received scant attention until he was about fifteen years old, when he showed his father a toy miniature theatre he had constructed. In his academic training in his father’s studio, he gained an understanding of how to look carefully at and deeply into an object and to observe and seize its transient quality. N.C. Wyeth ... taught his son the use of the materials and tools of painting, but did no impose on him his own technique.
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Andrew Wyeth is one of the most popular American painters of the twentieth century. 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 twentieth century. Wyeth’s art reflects his deeply-felt response to the rural environment where he was raised as a child and his upbringing. He uses a palette mostly of earth colors and his technique is precise and detailed, yet he lifts his paintings above photographic naturalism with an unreal, visionary quality. Wyeth’s work reveals an underlying symbolism and deep understanding of the abstract qualities of light, time, form, and space.
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Andrew Wyeth - Tolling Bell Although this artist is admired for his technical brilliance Andrew Wyeth prints are cherished for their authentic value. Wyeth has always been able to capture memorable places and figures that represent American culture with ease and represent them in a meaningful way. Museum collections of his paintings celebrate his vision for art while somewhere with a paintbrush in hand, he continues create.
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