ANDREW WYETH (1917-2009)
ANDREW WYETH (1917-2009)
ANDREW WYETH (1917-2009)
ANDREW WYETH (1917-2009)
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THE COLLECTION OF LORINDA PAYSON DE ROULET
ANDREW WYETH (1917-2009)

Chicken Mash

细节
ANDREW WYETH (1917-2009)
Chicken Mash
signed 'Andrew Wyeth' (lower right)
watercolor on paper
30 x 21 ¼ in. (76.2 x 54 cm.)
Painted in 1959
来源
M. Knoedler & Co., Inc., New York.
Joan Whitney and Charles Shipman Payson, New York (acquired from the above, by 1966).
By descent from the above to the late owner.
出版
B.J. Wyeth, Christina's World, Boston, 1982, p. 161.
展览
Buffalo, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Andrew Wyeth: Temperas, Watercolors and Drawings, November-December, 1962, p. 55.
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts; Baltimore, Baltimore Museum of Art; New York, Whitney Museum of American Art and The Art Institute of Chicago, Andrew Wyeth: Temperas, Watercolors, Dry Brush Drawings, October 1966-June 1967, p. 72, no. 136.
更多详情
The Andrew & Betsy Wyeth Study Center of the Brandywine Museum of Art confirms that this object is recorded in Betsy James Wyeth’s files.

荣誉呈献

Emmanuelle Loulmet
Emmanuelle Loulmet Specialist, Head of the Impressionist and Modern Day Sale

拍品专文

For over half a century, Andrew Wyeth's art has proven to be the most enduring of any American Realist, bringing the artist considerable acclaim both at home and abroad. His work has been appreciated for its seeming simplicity and its sheer beauty, for its celebration of rural American life, and for the haunting, elegiac silence that often pervades his compositions, such as Chicken Mash. As Susan C. Larsen writes, "Andrew Wyeth generally offered mystery rather than certainty in his art. The power of the unseen at work in nature and in human life gives his art its power and unique presence" (Wondrous Strange, exhibition catalogue, New York, 1998, p. 18).
Indeed, an intimate scene of poignant beauty, Chicken Mash demonstrates the best of Andrew Wyeth's hauntingly beautiful interiors. Shrouded in a careful shadow and void of any apparent human presence, Wyeth utilizes sweeping brushwork to create a sense of atmosphere within the scene. The present work depicts a scene in the Olson family home on Hathorn Point in Cushing, Maine. The Olson's daughter, Christina, is the subject of Wyeth's masterwork Christina's World (The Museum of Modern Art, New York).
Emblematic of his genius technique, Chicken Mash captures the deeply personal connection that permeates the artist’s best work. In this ceaselessly enigmatic composition, Wyeth provokes the viewer to contemplate the mysteries to be found within his vision of modern American life.

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