Autorenbild.
36+ Werke 883 Mitglieder 9 Rezensionen Lieblingsautor von 1 Lesern

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LVLCAC | Feb 4, 2021 |
I particularly love his study of Helga. While I find her rather...uh...manish, you can see through his art how beautiful she was in his eyes.
 
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Amelia1989 | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 10, 2019 |
Magnificence. Instead of getting a wordy autobiography, Wyeth gives us his paintings and provides the reasoning and associated memories with each work of art. Now, that's a true biography. Thus we see the artist as the artist, not as a biographer wants to be seen.

Wyeth was a Regional Realist and very East Coast American, which also comes across in his descriptions. The reader can look at The Cider Barrel, for instance, and discover that good cider needs to be kept filled to the brim. If that information wasn't there, the picture would still stand, but now you view it in a completely different way.

He also brings out his technique, such as not being as neat as his father, N.C. Wyeth, was with his illustrations. His father's death deeply affected Andrew, as seen in Weatherside. The Olson house is falling apart, but instead of cleaning the artwork, Wyeth remains real, because his father's tragic death reminded him that all things pass and nothing holds still forever. Same with Marsh Hawk, a tempura showing old wagon trains that were later destroyed in a flood. Nothing lasts.

Wyeth can also be humorous, and this is where his descriptions are so apt. Storm At Sea was painted with most of the lighthouse purposely cut off, which irritated a passing tourist who remarked, "You can see he's an amateur by how he's cut off the top of the lighthouse." Everyone is a critic!

"You're in the lap of the gods-almost like painting with your eyes half-closed. Sometimes I don't want to see too clearly."

This entire book is a treasure, not just for the incredible art but for the honesty and the intimacy that Wyeth provides us. I now want to travel to Maine and Chadds Ford, PA to see the countryside and the people of Andrew Wyeth's world.

Book Season = Winter (snow, dry, colorless)



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Gold_Gato | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Sep 16, 2013 |
I particularly love his study of Helga. While I find her rather...uh...manish, you can see through his art how beautiful she was in his eyes.
 
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Ameliapei | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Apr 18, 2013 |
This beautifully illustrated book, published for a 1998 exhibition by the same name, focuses on the evocative, sometimes mysterious and occasionally spooky works of four Pennsylvania artists: Howard Pyle, NC Wyeth, Andrew Wyeth and Jamie Wyeth. These artists form a continuum in the Brandywine Valley, beginning with the teacher, noted illustrator Pyle, and continuing with his student, illustrator NC Wyeth, Wyeth's son Andrew, and Andrew's son Jamie. While spotlighting each artist's more fanciful pieces, it also provides visual testimony to the transcendent quality of the work of Andrew Wyeth, which many critics erroneously judge to be simple landscapes of a bygone era, when they are in fact far more than simply representational. The book includes beautiful full-color illustrations of many works not generally seen, especially among those by Jamie Wyeth, and includes an introduction that outlines the Brandywine River tradition and the way each artist relates to it and to each other. Other essays by various authors (including Betsy James Wyeth) focus on each artist. Although it emphasizes images over text, it is an outstanding book for those who admire these artists' work, or those who would like to learn more about them.
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kambrogi | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Feb 2, 2009 |
Beautiful coffee-table book with a strong historical narrative, biographical about this highly talented family. Informative with lots of illustrations of the many fascinating subjects painted by the Wyeths and other early fabulous painters.
 
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sungene | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 16, 2007 |
The art of Andrew Wyeth
Diese Rezension wurde von mehreren Benutzern als Missbrauch der Nutzungsbedingungen gekennzeichnet und wird nicht mehr angezeigt (Anzeigen).
 
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Tutter | Dec 19, 2014 |
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