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Writer's pictureGuy Priel

Wyeth's Pursuit of Strangeness

Updated: Nov 18, 2023

One of my favorite American art families was the family of N.C. Wyeth and his son Andrew, who's work I recently stumbled across online. Although I do admire the work of other American artists, especially folk-art, N.C. Wyeth remains a favorite. His son Andrew set the standard for strangeness.

A new exhibit at Washington D.C.'s National Gallery of Art sheds new light on Andrew and his work.

The last time the National Gallery devoted an exhibition to Andrew Wyeth, it was billed as a revelation but received with some resistance. This was the notorious Helga show, or striptease, as John Updike - one of the few critics to find things to admire in the 1987 exhibition - described it: several hundred pictures executed on the sly (both Wyeth’s wife and Helga’s husband were, reportedly, kept in the dark) from 1971 to 1985, representing a striking German woman with long, reddish-blond hair, often depicted, clothed or in the nude, in pensive reverie. Helga Testorf, a GI bride and homesick mother of four, served as a nurse in the household of Karl Kuerner, a machine gunner for the German army during World War I, and was a neighbor of the Wyeths at Chadds Ford, in the Revolutionary War district of the Brandywine Valley in southeastern Pennsylvania, an area dotted with picturesque farms and the secluded mansions of the du Ponts.

It was not just the voyeuristic aura of the Helga exhibition, the museum’s first one-man show granted to a living American painter, that annoyed critics and troubled curators as well. It was its seemingly meretricious nature, at a time when Wyeth’s popularity with museumgoers remained high even as his reputation among critics, having crested by the mid-1960s, was in decline.

The pictures on the walls belonged to a rich Philadelphia publisher who, as owner of the copyrights, stood to gain from exposure in such a respected venue. After a national tour of the exhibition, he crassly sold his cache to a Japanese company. Lambasted by critics as absurd and tasteless, the show was a traumatic event for the museum.

The absorbing new Wyeth exhibition, “Andrew Wyeth: Looking Out, Looking In,” is in certain respects the opposite of the Helga show, even something of an exorcism of it. Where the Helga show was dominated by a single human figure, the current exhibition is entirely without people, except for a couple of preparatory sketches. Insistent images of Helga confronted viewers of the earlier show. Instead of such cacophonous material, the current show is built around a single, quiet motif in many variations: the window.

The result of the carefully conceived installation, in which preparatory studies are grouped around more finished and often drastically simplified paintings, is an increasingly immersive experience, an aesthetic revelation rather than a prurient one. The catalog essays, by National Gallery curators Nancy Anderson and Charles Brock, are understated, inquisitive, and well written - in English that cats and dogs can understand.

Meanwhile, there are signs that the tacit embargo on scholarly attention to Wyeth is being lifted after some 50 years. One reason, surely, is that Wyeth, once called the most famous artist in America, has all but disappeared from view in popular culture, eclipsed by Andy Warhol and Georgia O’Keeffe, and his work is open to new discovery.

A younger generation of art historians, immune to the old battles surrounding Wyeth, when he was often regarded as the crusty counterpoise of anything truly modern in art, is exploring his varied work as though it is virgin territory. Wyeth’s surging reputation in Asia is another reason why he is back in circulation.

The exhibit was inspired by a gift to the National Gallery in 2009, a few weeks after Wyeth’s death at age 91, of a relatively small - one might even say window-sized - painting called "Wind from the Sea", begun in the family's summer retreat in Cushing, Maine, in August 1947, when Wyeth was barely 30, and two years after his father, N.C., the great illustrator of Treasure Island and The Last of the Mohicans, died, along with Wyeth’s four-year-old nephew, in a railroad accident at Chadds Ford. His father’s death was particularly momentous for Wyeth, the youngest of five children, and haunted many of his subsequent paintings, such as the superb and enigmatic "Spring Fed", a centerpiece of the National Gallery show, with its brace of windows (one of which is mysteriously shorn of its mullions) looking out from a cistern in the Kuerner barn on a field near the crossing where N.C. died.

Homeschooled as a frail child and free to roam the idyllic Brandywine countryside in dress-up games of Robin Hood - the picture of Robin’s death by his father was, according to Wyeth, an influence on the horizontal layout and “sense of foreboding” of "Spring Fed" - Wyeth, whose only art teacher was his father, had shown early promise, and doggedly completed the tedious drawing exercises of cones and boxes that his father inflicted on him. The elder Wyeth, who had built an imposing house and studio at Chadd’s Ford - with a separate high-ceilinged room, equipped with movable stairs, for painting murals - created around him a theatrical grandeur that overshadowed and overwhelmed his gifted son, who preferred to work for much of his life in a small, converted schoolhouse nearby. To visit the two studios today, now in the possession of Brandywine Conservancy, which also administers Brandywine River Museum with its trove of art by the Wyeths, is to step from the fantasy-driven dimensions of the Gilded Age to something more intimate and human-scale, in keeping with Wyeth’s own subtler artistic practice.

Early on Wyeth developed a flair for watercolor, combining a freehanded vigor with an uncanny ability to capture detailed effects of water and light in pictures that recalled Winslow Homer, a family idol - the Wyeth summer home in Maine was called “Eight Bells” after Homer’s heroic painting of sailors taking their bearings at sea. In 1937, when he was 20, Wyeth’s precocious show of watercolors sold out in two days at the prestigious Macbeth Gallery in New York.

But Wyeth sensed that something more than facility and commercial viability were needed, an attitude reinforced by his young wife, Betsy, who had grown up in the Roycroft community in upstate New York, dedicated to the austere arts-and-crafts values of John Ruskin and William Morris. When Wyeth painted a cover for "The Saturday Evening Post" in 1943 and was offered a contract for 10 more, Betsy, his longtime business manager, warned him against it, saying he would be Norman Rockwell.

"Wind from the Sea" was among the first paintings in which he tried to express some of those things. A partially opened window, with billowing curtains decorated with crocheted birds momentarily in flight, almost fills the frame, revealing - through the frayed and disintegrating lace - a view of a field traversed by a curving dirt road, a narrow line of evergreens on the horizon, and a silvery sliver of the sea. The mood of this monochromatic painting, all grayish greens giving way to greenish grays, is timeworn and melancholy, even if we do not know that among the distant evergreens is a family graveyard, the same one in which Wyeth himself is now buried.

The picture was executed on a panel of Masonite in the exacting medium of egg tempera, requiring many applications over weeks or even months of patient crosshatching. Paradoxically, the result, viewed up close, is a glossy painted surface in which marks of the hand are rendered all but invisible, like a photographic print of itself.

In sharp contrast are the freely rendered studies, in pencil and watercolor, that, as was Wyeth’s usual practice, preceded the laborious painting. According to Wyeth, he was working in a stifling upper room of the dilapidated, eighteenth-century farmhouse belonging to his friends the destitute siblings Christina and Alvaro Olson, who made a hardscrabble living by picking blueberries, when he crossed the room to open a window and let in some air.

It is at this point that the full drama of "Wind from the Sea" begins to emerge, for the picture is intimately tied to "Christina’s World", painted the following year in 1948, and may even be viewed as something of a preview of it. "Christina’s World" is among the most immediately recognizable pictures in all of American art, as familiar as "Whistler’s Mother" or Grant Wood’s "American Gothic". It hangs in the Museum of Modern Art, as isolated in its resolute pictorial strangeness, among the surrounding expanse of cubist and abstract art, as the lone figure of Christina Olson herself crawling - or rather clawing - her way across the same Maine field that we see out the window in "Wind from the Sea", toward the same distant farmhouse in which Wyeth opened the window to let in some air.

Much has been written about how the paraplegic Christina, crippled by a childhood disease that may have been polio, was unable to walk, and how her close friend Betsy James, another summer visitor, introduced Wyeth, her future husband, to Christina, already past 50 at the time of the painting. Betsy James actually posed for Christina’s body. But the linkage between the two paintings may be closer still. For we learn from this exhibition that Wyeth’s first quick sketch of the curtains billowing from the opened window was on a piece of paper that already had Christina’s head carefully drawn on it. Wyeth positioned the window immediately beneath the head, as though Christina was somehow wearing the window or had partially turned into it.

For if we place "Christina’s World" and "Wind from the Sea" side by side, we notice something strange. The two paintings are structured in remarkably similar ways, with the billowing curtains reproducing, and at the same angle. This evocation of a ghostly female presence would help explain why window and head are conjoined in the initial sketch, and why Wyeth referred to "Wind from the Sea" as a portrait of Christina.

Robert Frost first saw "Wind from the Sea" in the living room of its owner, Charles Morgan, founding director of Mead Art Museum at Amherst College, where both men taught. A classical archaeologist with wide-ranging tastes, Morgan had purchased the painting in 1952, a year after working briefly for the CIA in Greece. When Morgan traveled abroad, Frost borrowed the picture for his own Amherst house, and when Frost served as consultant in poetry at Library of Congress, he asked to have the picture hung in his office. Already a passionate admirer of Wyeth, Frost approached the artist in 1953, without success, to collaborate on a new edition of his landmark book of poems North of Boston.

As Frost’s 85th birthday approached in 1959, Morgan proposed that Wyeth paint the poet’s portrait. Wyeth, who disliked painting portraits, gently refused.

There are intriguing connections between "Wind from the Sea" and “Home Burial,” one of the narrative poems in North of Boston, in which a husband and wife respond differently to the loss of their first child. The wife can not get over her grief and is appalled that her husband has apparently moved on with life. She stands at the top of the stairs looking out a window. He mounts the stairs to take a look for himself as she descends, threatening to leave the house as he drones insensitively on, touching inadvertently on the association of windows with graveyards that we see in "Wind from the Sea", and their own blighted marriage:

"I never noticed it from here before.

I must be wonted to it—that’s the reason.

The little graveyard where my people are!

So small the window frames the whole of it.

Not so much larger than a bedroom, is it?"

Dismissing Frost’s bucolic imagery as of secondary importance, like his own supposedly “rustic scenes,” Wyeth praised instead the poet’s strangely abstract meanings. Wyeth insisted that he himself was an “abstractionist.” The two artists shared a sharp clarity of design, almost geometric in poems like “Home Burial,” with its frames and diagonals and abrupt changes of vantage point. Likewise, Wyeth achieved a geometric rigor that almost recalls Mondrian in pictures such as the grid-like, squares-within-squares "Off at Sea", a painting of a bench in a church vestry with windows looking out, in which a sitting boy has been painted over and replaced by a single clothes hanger.

In the evocative "Groundhog Day", Wyeth discarded the seated figure of Anna Kuerner from an early study and reduced the table setting to a single knife, a white plate, and a teacup and saucer. As in so many of Wyeth’s paintings, one feels that someone has died. Looking around at so many stark, color-starved, threadbare, wintry paintings, one has the impression that it is always Groundhog Day in Wyeth’s world, with spring in doubt. And maybe one of the things that is dying in these pictures is the tradition of realist painting itself, at least of the kind that Wyeth felt he was painting.

It is possible to feel that the National Gallery is trying to substitute a more palatable and “abstract” Wyeth, airbrushed of his Republican Party values and his naive patriotism. Surely he was channeling Norman Rockwell in 1950, when he painted " Young America" a boy on a bike in cavalry attire trailing a foxtail in red, white, and blue. One tires of pictures that show off the weapons of a local farmer, including a disturbingly slapstick composition in which his sniper’s rifle points back at his gnome-like wife, who resembles Georges de La Tour’s fortune teller.

A more persuasive hint of menace lurks in the circling vultures in the marvelous "Soaring". "Night Hauling", ostensibly depicting a thief robbing a lobster pot amid liquid phosphorescence, derives some of its sheer oddness from its openness to another realm of contemporary imagery altogether, a pilot approaching a sleeping city at night. Looking at arresting pictures like these, one understands the observation that Wyeth’s paintings were about the pursuit of strangeness.

Strangeness pervades the final room of “Andrew Wyeth: Looking Out, Looking In,” in which paintings from the same year as "Wind from the Sea", including the Whitney’s "Spool Bed", evoke the ghostly aura of an abandoned house in Maine with a damaged blue window shade. The pictures recall Robert Frost’s similarly strange “The Black Cottage,” in which a minister and one of his parishioners press their faces to the glass above the “weathered window-sill” of a house abandoned after the death of its owner. The house belonged to a woman who staunchly supported the North in the Civil War, and Jefferson’s “hard mystery” that “all men are created free and equal.” The minister imagines a desert island devoted to truths abandoned like the house itself.

The final lines of Frost’s poem are strangely consonant with the window-laden imagery and dreamlike, elegiac mood of some of Andrew Wyeth’s most entrancing work, art that, like Frost’s abandoned truths, we keep coming back to:

"So desert it would have to be, so walled

By mountain ranges half in summer snow,

No one would covet it or think it worth

The pains of conquering to force change on.

Scattered oases where men dwelt, but mostly

Sand dunes held loosely in tamarisk

Blown over and over themselves in idleness.

Sand grains should sugar in the natal dew

The babe born to the desert, the sand storm

Retard mid-waste my cowering caravans—

“There are bees in this wall.” He struck the clapboards,

Fierce heads looked out; small bodies pivoted.

We rose to go. Sunset blazed on the windows."



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