What has been the response to this exhibition?
The director of the Philadelphia Museum tells me that when she goes into the gallery there's utter silence. Like a church. They're really looking. I get letters from people about my work. The thing that pleases me most is that my work touches their feelings. In fact, they don't talk about the paintings. They end up telling me the story of their life or how their father died.
What does it feel like for you to look over 70 years of work?
When I made these paintings I was lost in trying to capture these moments and emotions that were taking place. It's a shock for me to go through and see all those years of painting my life, which is very personal for me. It's a very difficult thing for an artist to look back at his work. If it's personal it touches all these emotions.
I'm shocked when I see my early work. At the show in Wilmington I saw the painting Tenant Farmer. Its solidity impressed me. You think you're developing and getting better and then you see something you did years ago. Looking at your early work—sometimes it has a depth that surprises you.
When I'm working, I often put a painting upside down. Does it hold its own in terms of texture and weight?—forget the subject.
How have you been influenced by modern art?
I have been perfectly natural in my development. I haven't gone to some show in New York and been influenced. I have never really sat down and looked at abstractions. I was dripping paint in a Jackson Pollock way—but it was a natural feeling for me. They say I was influenced by John Marin, but Christ, I was painting like that before I ever saw a Marin. In the catalogue one of the writers said that I was influenced by the Philadelphia painters, but that's not true at all.I thought they were stupid.


Comments
It is not just the details in the objects of his paintings that Andrew Wyeth brings to us, it's the details in the feelings. Observing his paintings I have experienced the smells, the cold and the warmth of Chadds Ford without ever having physically gone there. His superb technique, together with a keen and sensitive and eye, have captured fragments of his life to create a wonderful mosaic of which we, the viewer, become a part. Andrew Wyeth's paintings have that unique quality that makes them both beautiful and timeless. He is an artist to rank with all time masters, a living legend.
Posted by Jose Bastos on March 17,2009 | 08:14 AM