Up From the Woods HS 32x37
Carolyn Wyeth
Limited Edition Print : Heavy Stock Paper
Size : 32x37 in | 81x94 cm
Edition : From the Edition of 500
Motivated Seller Reduced
- Hand Signed Limited Edition $2,200
Hand SignedPencil Numbered And Signed By the Artist.
Condition Mint
Not FramedPencil Numbered And Signed By the Artist.
Purchased fromDealer 2013
Story / Additional InfoPrivate collector
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
LID69196
Carolyn Wyeth - United States
Art Brokerage: Carolyn Wyeth American Artist: b.1909-1994. Carolyn Wyeth, daughter of N.C. Wyeth and sister of Andrew Wyeth, was a well-known artist in her own right. Her hometown was Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania. She worked and taught out of N. C. Wyeth House and Studio. Her nephew, Jamie Wyeth was one of her students. At the age of 12 Wyeth began training with her father in his studio starting with a foundational grounding in drawing using charcoal, mastering studies of cubes, pyramid and plaster casts. Her father's guidance to know and become emotionally in tune with her subjects became her artistic guiding principal. Wyeth found her inspiration for her work in solitude of Chadds Ford. For her, painting was soothing. She followed her own path artistically, yet like her father and brother Andrew she drew from her life and the surroundings of Chadd Ford. Wyeth's work reflects strong design, bold color and nuanced emotion. Wyeth primarily painted still lifes of items that were part of her daily life, like a chair, pumpkin, items in the studio. She also drew landscapes of the woods and fields seen around her home. Wyeth painted about four paintings a year and rarely exhibited. Of her work, Brandywine Museum published: "Her paintings reconstruct private moments from the past and often evoke an air of romance, remembrance and loss." Wyeth passed some of her traits to her nephew. Both prefer to work with oil paint and charcoal. Wyeth enjoys working with animals "particularly chickens and dogs", as does Jamie. Both also enjoy solitude to work. Carolyn said to Richard Meryman in an interview "I think all great stuff comes out of being alone. At the time you may feel lonely, but it's doing something wonderful to you".