Wyeth's World
In the wake of his death, controversy still surrounds painter Andrew Wyeth's stature as a major American artist
- By Henry Adams
- Smithsonian magazine, June 2006, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 6)
The operation severed the muscles in Wyeth’s shoulder, and although he eventually recovered, it was unclear for a time whether he would paint again. During weeks of recuperation, he took long walks through the winter fields, wearing a pair of old boots that had once belonged to artist Howard Pyle, his father’s teacher and mentor.
Trodden Weed, which Wyeth painted several weeks after the surgery—his hand supported by a sling suspended from the ceiling—depicts a pair of French cavalier boots in full stride across a landscape. The painting is both a kind of self-portrait and a meditation on the precariousness of life. Wyeth has said that the painting reflects a collection of highly personal feelings and memories—of the charismatic Pyle, whose work greatly influenced both Wyeth and his father, of Wyeth’s childhood, when he dressed up as characters from NC’s and Pyle’s illustrations, and of the vision of death as it appeared to him in the figure of Dürer, striding confidently across the landscape.
By the time of his rehabilitation, Wyeth had achieved a signature look and a distinctive personal approach, finding nearly all of his subjects within a mile or so of the two towns in which he lived—Chadds Ford, where he still spends winters, and Cushing, Maine, where he goes in the summer. “I paint the things I know best,” he has said. Many of his most memorable paintings of the 1960s and ’70s, in fact, focus on just two subjects—the Kuerner farm in Chadds Ford (owned by German immigrant Karl Kuerner and his mentally unbalanced wife, Anna) and the Olson house in Cushing, inhabited by crippled Christina and her brother, Alvaro.
During the 1940s and ’50s, Wyeth was encouraged by two notable supporters of the avant-garde, Alfred Barr, the founding director of New York’s Museum of Modern Art, who purchased, and promoted, Christina’s World, and painter and art critic Elaine de Kooning, the wife of renowned Abstract Expressionist Willem de Kooning.
In 1950, writing in ARTnews, Elaine de Kooning praised Wyeth as a “master of the magic-realist technique.” Without “tricks of technique, sentiment or obvious symbolism,” she wrote, “Wyeth, through his use of perspective, can make a prosperous farmhouse kitchen, or a rolling pasture as bleak and haunting as a train whistle in the night.” That same year, Wyeth was lauded, along with Jackson Pollock, in Time and ARTnews, as one of the greatest American artists. But as the battle lines between realism and abstraction were drawn more rigidly in the mid-1960s, he was increasingly castigated as old-fashioned, rural, reactionary and sentimental. The 1965 ordination of Wyeth by Life magazine as “America’s preeminent artist” made him an even larger target. “The writers who were defending abstraction,” says the Philadelphia Museum’s Kathleen Foster, “needed someone to attack.” Envy may also have played a part. In 1959 Wyeth sold his painting Groundhog Day to the Philadelphia Museum for $31,000, the largest sum that a museum had ever paid for a work by a living American painter; three years later he set another record when he sold That Gentleman to the Dallas Museum of Art for $58,000.
Throughout the 1970s and ’80s, Wyeth kept up a steady stream of major paintings—landscapes of fir trees and glacial boulders, studies of an 18th-century mill in Chadds Ford and, above all, likenesses of people he knew well, such as his longtime friend Maine fisherman Walt Anderson and his Pennsylvania neighbors Jimmy and Johnny Lynch.
Then, in 1986, Wyeth revealed the existence of 246 sketches, studies, drawings and paintings (many of them sensuous nudes) of his married neighbor, Helga Testorf, who was 22 years his junior. He also let it be known that he had been working on the paintings for 15 years, apparently unbeknown even to his wife. (For her part, Betsy didn’t seem entirely surprised. “He doesn’t pry in my life and I don’t pry in his,” she said at the time.) The revelation—many found it hard to believe that the artist could have produced so many portraits without his wife’s knowledge—thrust the works onto the covers of both Time and Newsweek. The story’s hold on the popular imagination, wrote Richard Corliss in Time, “proved that Wyeth is still the one artist whose style and personality can tantalize America.” An exhibition of the works at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C. followed ten months later. But the revelation was also seen as a hoax and publicity stunt. In his 1997 book American Visions, for example, Time art critic Robert Hughes denounced the way the Helga pictures came to light as a “masterpiece of art-world hype.”
This past April, NBC News’ Jamie Gangel asked Wyeth why he had kept the paintings secret. “Because I’d been painting houses, barns, and, all of a sudden, I saw this girl, and I said, ‘My God, if I can get her to pose, she personifies everything I feel, and that’s it. I’m not going to tell anyone about this, I’m going to just paint it.’ People said, ‘Well, you’re having sex.’ Like hell I was. I was painting. And it took all my energy to paint.” Wyeth went on to say that he still paints Helga once in a while. “She’s in my studio in and out. Sort of an apparition.”
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Comments (19)
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my aunt elizabeth ehrbar was a major part of my life she was a second mother to me, as well as 27 or so cousins. she had this painting "christinas world" hanging in her dinning room and i always admired it. its been there as long as i can remember not knowing why or what it meant. it always touch my soul when i would glance t it. my aunt"betsy" was in a car accident when she was sixteen and was paralysed from the waist down. yet she lived the most amazing life she was a genorous loving caring nurturing person. donating money to many charities and always doing for others. i am the man i am today due to her influence. im sure all my cousins would say the same. the impact she had on myself was powerful i learned to appreciate all i had and love people for who they are. i could go on forever....My aunt Elizabeth ehrbar passed away last year at 60 from complications due to her failing kidnys, and as you can imagine was earth shatterring! she was our rock as well as the glue that keeped my family together. we all cried for at least 6 months after it was and still is hard. seeing a movie recently had the painting in it and made me do some reasearch. And i cried all over again and it hurt so bad to relive the pain of her loss. however i look at the painting in a whole new light the girl in the painting is now my aunt trying to concur all of lifes struggles she must have faced, i can only imagine. so i will still cry when i see it just with a new found feeling of pride for her as well as love and understanding. its a beautiful piece and that is what it does for me it litterally moves me with one glance and takes me to all different times in my life. god bless you mr wyeth.....i need to find a copy....i stronly feel the world is a better place for having my aunt in it!!!
Posted by steve griffin on March 12,2012 | 01:08 AM
our magazine is going to introduce Wyeth's painting, i have to writing some thing about Wyeth's work. it is not the first time i read his work, i think he is an alone artist. he is effect many chinese painters.
Posted by amylina on December 28,2011 | 09:40 PM
I am giving a talk about composition and wanted to locate a demonstration of Andrew Wyeth's Christina's World showing the effects of changing several elements of the picture. It demonstrated how moving one element changed the entire composition effect. I have been searching the web for the site but have been unable to locate it. I viewed it in 2009 and used it at that time for another composition workshop. Any assistance would be greatly appreciated, Gloria
Posted by Gloria J. Heard on September 3,2010 | 05:09 PM
I purchased what appears to be a Wyeth sketch at auction, but I have several questions about it- the sketch is titled 'April Wind'. On the back of the sketch (which is affixed to a solid cardboard?) are the words Andrew Wyeth VP 1124...I do not claim to know anything about art so I am asking what does vp 1124 mean and is this a legitmate sketch- it is not a poster as their isn't a border, the sketch is also signed in what appears to be Wyeth's hand. Does anyone know what I have here? Many thanks.
Posted by Betsy on May 3,2010 | 11:52 AM
I finally took the time to look at my favorite framed copy of a painting. It's autobiographical. It's Andrew Wyeth's "Soaring". Very emotional for me.
Posted by ethel saltz on April 2,2010 | 09:58 AM
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 | 01:30 PM
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 | 04:13 PM
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 | 03:13 PM
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 | 05:07 PM
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 | 08:20 PM
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 | 05:51 PM
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 | 05:16 PM
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 | 11:07 AM
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 | 10:15 AM
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