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Andrew met Betsy, whose family summered in Maine not far from the Wyeths, in 1939, and he proposed to her when they had known each other for only a week. They married in May 1940; Andrew was 22, Betsy, 18. Although not an artist herself, Betsy had grown up in a household preoccupied with art and design. Beautiful, sensitive, unconventional, intuitive and highly intelligent, she not only managed household affairs and raised their two sons—Nicholas, now an art dealer, and James (Jamie), a much-exhibited painter and watercolorist—but she also became Andrew’s protector, his model and his principal artistic guide, taking over the role his father had performed so assiduously.
Even when sales were slow, she insisted that her husband turn down commercial illustration projects and focus on painting. Betsy “made me into a painter that I would not have been otherwise,” Wyeth told Meryman. “She didn’t paint the pictures. She didn’t get the ideas. But she made me see more clearly what I wanted. She’s a terrific taskmaster. Sharp. A genius in this kind of thing. Jesus, I had a severe training with my father, but I had a more severe training with Betsy....Betsy galvanized me at the time I needed it.”
Andrew needed Betsy’s support, for his father did not approve of his subdued, painstaking temperas. “Can’t you add some color to it?” NC asked about one of them. He was particularly disparaging about Andrew’s 1942 tempera of three buzzards soaring over Chadds Ford. “Andy, that doesn’t work,” he said. “That’s not a painting.” Discouraged, Andrew put the painting in his basement, where his sons used it to support a model train set. Only years later, at the insistence of his friend, dance impresario Lincoln Kirstein, did he return to it. He finished the work, titled Soaring, in 1950; it was exhibited at Robert Macbeth’s gallery that same year.
By 1945, NC—then 63 and shaken by World War II and what he called “the lurid threads of the world’s dementia”—was losing confidence in himself as a painter. He became moody and depressed. Brightening his colors and flirting with different styles didn’t seem to help. He became more and more dependent on Andrew, relying on him for encouragement and support.
On the morning of October 19, 1945, NC was on an outing with his namesake, 3-year-old Newell Convers Wyeth, the child of his oldest son, Nathaniel. At a railroad crossing by the farm of a neighbor, Karl Kuerner, the car NC was driving stopped while straddling the tracks—no one knows why. A mail train from Philadelphia plowed into it, killing NC instantly and hurling little Newell onto the cinder embankment. He died of a broken neck.
After that, Andrew’s work became deeper, more serious, more intense. “It gave me a reason to paint, an emotional reason,” he has said. “I think it made me.” One day, walking close to the tracks where his father was killed, he spotted Allan Lynch, a local boy, running down the hill facing the Kuerner farm. Wyeth joined him. The two found an old baby carriage, climbed into it together, and rolled down the hill, both of them laughing hysterically. The incident inspired Wyeth’s 1946 painting Winter, which depicts Lynch running down the hill, chased by his shadow. “The boy was me at a loss, really,” he told Meryman. “His hand, drifting in the air, was my hand, groping, my free soul.”
In the painting, the hill is rendered with tiny, meticulous, but also strangely unpredictable, strokes, anticipating the hill that Wyeth would portray two years later in Christina’s World. In Winter, Wyeth has said, the hill became the body of his father. He could almost feel it breathe.
In 1950, two years after he painted Christina’s World, Wyeth was diagnosed with bronchiectasis, a potentially fatal disease of the bronchial tubes. Most of a lung had to be removed. During the operation, Wyeth’s heart began to fail, and he later reported having had a vision in which he saw one of his artistic heroes, the 15th-century painter Albrecht Dürer, walk toward him with his hand extended, as if summoning him. In his vision, Wyeth started toward his hero, and then pulled back as Dürer withdrew.


Comments
The technical mastery is what I always see in Weyeth. My mind wanders along charmed and challenged by the splendor of what a brush can accomplish in the hands of this painter. Only by visiting the painting more than one time sometimes more than ten times can I begin feel the meaning within that belongs to me.,
Posted by Cassandra Suorez Petitt on November 27,2007 | 09:38AM
My husband was in the doctors office and was looking at your magazine and was reading about the worlds most famous jazz drummer-he can't remember his name but he is black and 87 years old. Can you tell me who this is and what issue the article was in? Our son plays the drums and we would like for him to read this article. Thank you We love your magazine!
Posted by Monica Simpson on March 18,2008 | 05:06PM
what museum is Adam located in today.
Posted by deborah on March 20,2008 | 12:42PM
I'm mystified as to why the article doesn't mention the Farnsworth Museum in Rockland, ME, which houses the world's largest collection of NC, Andrew, and Jamie Wyeth paintings. It is a jewel in midcoast Maine and a must-see for Wyeth fans.
Posted by Barbara on April 4,2008 | 12:28PM
Well, I see there are still a few "experts" trying to minimalize the impact that Andrew Wyeth's paintings have had on America and it's art scene, probably the same "critics" and curators who dumped on Norman Rockwell and Edward Hopper. Obviously, the mass appeal these artists have had to the "average" viewer turns off the "expert". Wyeth's paintings are multifacet, they have great technical and design elements but their ability to stir our strongest emotions make them universally appealing. We have a great gallery of art history to draw from and our future endeavors will continue to expand this depository as each artist explores the wide spectrum of human emotions from the minimalism of an Agnes Martin painting to the exuberance of a Marc Chagall, let's celebrate and enjoy the genius of Andrew Wyeth.
Posted by David E. Winward on April 29,2008 | 05:58AM
Wyeth along with the poet, Robert Frost used the rural envirnoment as a tool to express our human anxieties in seeking comfort, joy and solace in life's struggle. Perhaps because of the increased dependency on technology for these needs along with the decline of our rural population there has been a distillation of the earlier sentimental value that was placed on their work but the universality of the human feelings that they were able to express will make their work always meaningful to our world.
Posted by David E. Winward on April 29,2008 | 01:26PM
as a amateur artist and commericial cabinetmaker very few people have infleunced me as much as andrew wyeth and his powerful paintings. for years in my study of watercolor painting every thing that i painted looked like an imiatation of wyeth. his work has inspired my life almost as much as my other great role(who is.a divine) so way to go andrew ...my best to you youve made me feel lucky to live in maine. craig lowe
Posted by craig lowe on June 13,2008 | 07:15AM
It is difficult to understand the disdain that some critics have for the works of Andrew Wyeth. If these same works did not have the widespread appeal to the lowly,uneducated masses would their dislike for this artist remain?
Posted by Gary Kemp on January 9,2009 | 08:07AM
I have watched Mr. Wyeth's career for the last 30 years with much joy. He is popular with the people the same way Rembrandt was in his time. Rembrandt too was snubbed by critics of his time as too slapdash, too slipshod, not as talented as other young "moderns" of the time. Today most, if not all, of young “moderns” are long forgotten. As for Wyeth, the art critic elitist cannot stand that they cannot put him on the cover of "Art in America" without having to eat crow. They do understand why the public loves him, because the public is not art educated like the critic thinks he is. They do not get to sell expensive ads in their magazines bought by the high price galleries in New York because those galleries have painted themselves into a corner when it comes to showing a Wyeth and could not dare have a picture of his in their “modern” gallery. Young art students are taught to ignore him and his draftsmanship like the plague. Their talent less teachers themselves cannot draw themselves. You must attend private academies to find any talented art teachers. That is why you see most young students unable to draw, paint or sculpt anything of substance that the vast public appreciates. Instead, cities are stuck with pointless mediocre “modern” monuments that move no one and are now being disassembled and stored. Young art students try to shock with glued-on baby doll heads and painted words. When they cannot say what they feel in their painting, they resort to simply writing words about what they feel on the canvas. Why not be a writer instead and leave fine art up to those like Wyeth. Someone willing to take years to learn to draw and paint and then add raw aptitude, understanding and discipline to execute a work of art.
Posted by william scott on January 17,2009 | 02:16PM
I love abstract art but also love Wyeth for his ability to show emotion in his painting. It is so sad that so many art critics are negative about his work. The true measure of an artist is the reaction of the masses to his work not the critics.
Posted by kay on January 17,2009 | 02:51PM
Andrew Wyeth was a genius. I looked at a collection of his work online and so many of his painings moved me. I could literally feel the paintings. I found myself staring at some of the paintings for the longest time because they were so stirring. I can't begin to imagine how profound it would be to view his work in person.
Posted by Carol Anderson on January 17,2009 | 05:20PM
I have been a fan of Wyeth for many years....as a mechanic and fabricator I appreciate Wyeth's messages that are apparent and make sense to me !
Posted by J.B. Thomas on January 24,2009 | 02:07PM
Wyeth is now buried now in the hard ground of Pennsylvania that he captured so well in his art. Yes, he died in winter. Any other season would have been wrong. His career was the most important of any American artist of the 20th century. To readers in the Southeast or world travellers, please know that the Greenville (South Carolina) Museum of Art will open a new display of their Wyeth collection on March 11, 2009. Please come see this giant's work with your own eyes. The reproductions cannot possibly capture the life that comes from his artwork.
Posted by Barb on January 30,2009 | 12:13PM
I've been fascinated by Christina's World for years and have a large copy of it hanging in my office. Most people look at it quizzically and then ask me why I like it. Collectively they think it is depressing. I think it is redemptive ... though at times I find it a bit distressing, too. I can never just glance at this picture; I have to drink it in. There is always something new to discover and internalize. But I do understand why so many people ask this question: "Why did he paint it? I would like to know, too.
Posted by Julie Larocco on February 3,2009 | 01:13PM
Neighbors across the Brandywine, just nice folks like the rest of the people I grew up with in Chadds Ford. As a young girl, Andy's black cape fascinated me. Exotic, since my father was a farmer and fox hunter and a black billowing cape was not something that hung in our coat closet. Andrew Wyeth's paintings always touch a part of those early childhood memories, more deeply than when I see the actual place today. It is his work that lives so vividly in my mind's eye and the cape....my garment of choice.
Posted by Patricia Stellwagon on March 2,2009 | 10:30AM