A Survey
June 6th – July 29th, 2017 Publication by:
101 Stone Block Row, Breck’s Mill, 2nd Floor, Greenville, DE 19807 (302) 652-‐0271 info@somervillemanning.com
It is with great pleasure that Somerville Manning Gallery joins in celebrating the 100th birthday of Andrew Wyeth with an exhibition of original paintings that spans eight decades. The show coincides with his major museum exhibition, In Retrospect , that originates at the Brandywine River Museum of Art in June 2017, and then travels to the Seattle Art Museum in the Fall. Over forty years ago I met Andrew Wyeth. Since that time I have enjoyed a long professional history with the Wyeth family beginning in the 1980s when I first started representing the N.C Wyeth estate. The association continued with major painting exhibitions for N.C Wyeth, Andrew Wyeth, Jamie Wyeth, as well as the entire Wyeth, McCoy, and Hurd family. Living in the Chadds Ford area everyone has an Andrew Wyeth story, as he was private but visible, painting in the countryside and lunching at the local diner. I was fortunate to share moments discussing our passion, art. Whenever I received a new painting by his father, N.C. Wyeth, I notified Andy and he came to the gallery. We had special moments standing in front of N.C. Wyeth illustrations as I listened to his perspective. His memories and intuitive understanding of a painting enlightened me to his own vision of his work, and how personal every object, chosen or missing from a painting, communicated his feeling of memory and loss. Wyeth was a pivotal artist in the international art scene, who bravely maintained his own form of realism during a time when most artists shifted from modernism to abstract expressionism. In the face of art world criticism that favored the current mode of abstraction, Wyeth steadfastly painted his own mind and style, using representationalism to express his deep innermost feelings and emotion. Careful examination of his subject and a multitude of studies was his process. --Victoria Manning President
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Blowing Leaves, 1980 | watercolor | 20 x 27 inches
Blue Eyed Susan, 1977 | watercolor and graphite on paper | 30 ½ x 22 inches
Carolyn Painting, 1933 | watercolor | 14 ½ x 21 inches
Chain Hoist, 1965 | watercolor | 29 x 27 ¾ inches
China Blue, 1987 | watercolor | 20x 26 inches
Corn and Grist, 1976 | watercolor | 21 ½ x 29 ½ inches
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Dry Well (Rain Barrel), 1958 | watercolor | 20 ¾ x 29 ¾ inches
Elsie’s House, 1958 | watercolor | 20 x 28 inches
Farm Horse, 1954 | watercolor | 21 ¾ x 29 ½ inches
Grist Mill, 1968 | watercolor | 20 x 28 inches
Master of Arts, 1999 | watercolor | 19 ¾ x 28 inches
Possum Hollow, 1984 | watercolor | 15 x 22 inches
Pumpkin Hill, 1977 | watercolor | 21 ½ x 30 inches
Sharp Shooter, 1997 | watercolor | 19 ½ x 27 ¾ inches
Star Route Study, 1977 | pencil on paper | 10 ½ x 13 ½ inches
Study for Grey Ghost, 1972 | watercolor | 10 x 13 ½ inches
Swallow Tail, 2000 | watercolor | 20 x 14 inches
Taylor’s Run, 1943 | watercolor | 21 ¾ x 30 inches
The Oak: Study for Sentry, 1949 | watercolor | 12 x 16 inches
The Outermost Bell, 1959 | watercolor | 24 ¼ x 30 inches
The Tide Mill, 1968 | watercolor | 13 ½ x 21 ½ inches
Untitled (Helga Looking from Afar), 1979 | watercolor | 20 x 27 ¼ inches
Winfield’s Porch, 1983 | egg tempera on board | 24 ½ x 30 ¼ inches
Copyright © 2017 Somerville Manning Gallery. All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced or distributed in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without the prior written permission of the publisher. i© 2017 Andrew Wyeth / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York image copyright image copyright @PacificSunTradingCompany, Courtesy of Frank E. Fowler and Warren Adelson