Wanda M. Corn

The Art of Andrew Wyeth

New York Graphic Society Ltd

1973

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Description

Signed first edition catalog of Wyeth's exhibition at the M.H. de Young Memorial Museum of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco with an inscription by the artist to Lincoln Kirstein, his most valued critic.

  • Wanda M. Corn (American).
  • Greenwich, Connecticut: New York Graphic Society Ltd, [1973].
  • Oblong quarto.
  • 176 pp., illustrated.
  • Inscribed to Lincoln Kirstein, "Dear Lincoln / Look at page 145 / much love / Andy -"; Page 145 contains a reproduction of Wyeth's portrait of an American Indian, Nogeeshik.
  • Bound in beige cloth, including dust jacket.


Lincoln Kirstein, who was on the board of MoMA, met Andrew Wyeth after the museum acquired Christina's World in 1948. Wyeth was still largely unknown at that time, and he quickly came to rely on Kirstein for support and honest criticism of his work. "Kirstein appointed himself Wyeth's friend, admirer, mentor, and stern critic - in essence a supersuccessor to NC. [...] Wyeth thinks that in the 1950s he needed Kirstein to push him toward more form in his work, more solidity" (Meryman, Andrew Wyeth: A Secret Life (1998) p 239, 243). Kirstein, who disdained most abstract art, was essential in providing Wyeth the confidence he needed to continue work in the face of hostile critics who derided his art as sentimental and unsophisticated. Wyeth was fond of quoting Kirstein's dismissive opinion of the critics, "Why do you want approval from those horses' asses?" (ibid, p. 390). Kirstein was a father figure to two generations of Wyeth artists, and as Andrew's son Jamie developed his own artistic gifts, Kirstein began to transfer his attention to the younger Wyeth. "After posing for nineteen-year-old Jamie, Kirstein more or less shifted his allegiance from Andrew and became Jamie's friend and mentor. Kirstein told Betsy, 'You gave me the only son I ever had'" (ibid, p. 275).

Condition Report

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Soiled boards.

Dust jacket yellowed and edge-worn.

 

Product is used.

Feature(s)

Dust Jacket, First Edition, Signed

Language

English

Subject

Art, Archives and collections, Association items, Modern first editions

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