:The Philadelphia Museum of Art will present "Andrew Wyeth: Memory
and Magic," an exhibition that surveys seven decades of the
artist's achievements, from March 29 through July 16. The
retrospective will include more than 100 works, among them
tempera paintings and watercolors from the 1930s to the present.
It will explore in-depth Wyeth's frequently unadorned and often
haunting images - ranging from natural forms like rocks and trees
and humble containers such as buckets, to stark rooms, windows
with curtains lifted in the breeze, bare hills and people lost in
deep introspection. The works, many of which draw upon his
boyhood experiences in and lifelong affection for the Brandywine
Valley near Philadelphia and on the coast of Maine, are lent from
public and private collections across the country and from the
private collection of Andrew and Betsy Wyeth.
"Andrew Wyeth's highly personal art has been etched in the
American public consciousness as an expression of rural life for
at least half a century. It is also important to realize that
Wyeth is very much part of a larger picture: his work has been
deeply informed by the early tempera paintings of the Italian
Renaissance, the charged realism of Thomas Eakins or the broad
brushwork of Franz Kline, among other artists whom he admires,"
said Anne d'Harnoncourt, director of the Philadelphia Museum of
Art.
"Andrew Wyeth: Memory and Magic" will explore the major themes
that have occupied Wyeth's art over the past 70 years, including
nature studies that frequently evoke the transience of life,
images of vessels and thresholds that metaphorically signal
various kinds of transitions, and still lifes and portraits that
may suggest or record the people who have appeared in his life.
Andrew Wyeth, "Widow's Walk," 1990, tempera on panel, 48 1/4 by
43 1/3 inches, courtesy of Frank E. Fowler.
Kathleen Foster, the Robert L. McNeil Jr Curator of American
Art at the Philadelphia Museum of Art, will oversee the exhibition
in Philadelphia. She notes that throughout his career, Wyeth's
vision has been built in part upon the tension between observation
and imagination: "Studying his subjects closely, he adds power by
simplifying and distilling his image. It's often the elimination,
not only of figures but of extraneous detail, that allows the
artist to back away from realism and press forward the emotional
and artistic message of painting."
The exhibition reflects Wyeth's intense engagement with his
various media over time. Among the works on view are 58 paintings
in egg tempera, a technique so time-consuming and intense that
Wyeth completes only about two paintings a year. It also includes
27 watercolors, among them early ones that convey an exuberance
reminiscent of Winslow Homer, preparatory studies that inform
Wyeth's more finished temperas, and other mature, independent
works in which closely observed subjects are often anchored into
complex compositions with earth-toned washes.
There are 16 works in drybrush, an exceptionally meticulous
watercolor technique that in Wyeth's hands may often resemble
tempera. Five pencil drawings that are studies for larger works
and two rare early oil paintings that reflect both the young
Wyeth's dexterity and his father's teaching are also on view.
While the exhibition opens with a number of Wyeth's early works
and closes with some of his most recent, little-known ones, it is
organized largely into thematic sections in which early, middle
and recent work is juxtaposed. The exhibition reflects what guest
curator Anne Knutson, in her catalog essay, calls "the complex
intersections between objects, the body and memory, delving into
the common experience of things triggering reminiscences."

Andrew Wyeth, "Groundhog Day," 1959, tempera on panel, 31 1/3
by 31 1/8 inches, Philadelphia Museum of Art.
Highlights of the exhibition include many familiar images
drawn from a lifetime divided between Chadds Ford, Penn., and Maine
where Wyeth, now in his 89th year, spends his summers. "Winter
1946," completed just a few months after a train in Chadds Ford
struck Wyeth's father, the famed illustrator N.C. Wyeth, reflects
the artist's response to his death. It shows a young neighbor
chased by his shadow down a sunlit hill, perhaps a metaphor for the
artist himself, alone and adrift in a world without his father.
Michael Taylor, the museum's Muriel and Philip Berman Curator of
Modern Art, notes in his essay, the boy careens across "the bulging
landscape that has become the living embodiment of N.C. Wyeth's
massive, heaving chest."
The exhibition contains several works from the collection of the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, including "Groundhog Day of 1959,"
one of Wyeth's best-known paintings. It will be exhibited in
context with preparatory drawings and watercolors that chart
Wyeth's working process leading to the finished painting. The
tempera conveys the sense of pale sunlight raking across a
windowsill and striking the flowered wallpaper of a kitchen in
the Kuerner farm, Chadds Ford, where a table is set for one.
According to Foster, Wyeth himself regards it as a portrait of
his neighbor Karl Kuerner, and she quotes Wyeth saying it was his
attempt to "get down to the essence of the man who wasn't there."
Wyeth's often elliptical approach to his subjects is also
reflected in some of his recent work, including an ambitious,
large-scale tempera of a river scene completed in 2003.
Horizontal in format, "The Carry" depicts a surge of water
roaring over rocks, turning through a narrow passage and flowing
into a calm expanse. It conveys the strong motion of water toward
the softly lit bank and woods in the distance. Wyeth recently
described this painting in highly personal terms, identifying
aspects of himself with the contrasting lights and darks and
alternating moods of turbulence and peacefulness that coexist in
the picture, and suggesting the continuity that extends through
the artist's career.
"Andrew Wyeth: Memory and Magic" is organized by the High Museum
of Art, Atlanta, with the collaboration of the Wyeth family and
the Philadelphia Museum of Art. Before opening in Philadelphia,
it is on view at the High through February 26.
Andrew Wyeth: Memory & Magic (cloth, $49.95; paper,
$35) is now available in the museum store, by calling
800-329-4856 or by visiting www.philamuseum.org.
Tickets for "Andrew Wyeth: Memory and Magic" are on sale now.
Tickets include a complimentary audiotour.
For information, including special discounts and other
promotions, 215-235-7469 or www.philamuseum.org.