Wayne Thiebaud (1920) is an American painter widely known for his colorful works depicting commonplace objects—pies, lipsticks, paint cans, ice cream cones, pastries, and hot dogs—as well as for his landscapes and figure paintings. Thiebaud is associated with the pop art movement because of his interest in objects of mass culture, although his early works, executed during the fifties and sixties, slightly predate the works of the classic pop artists. Thiebaud uses heavy pigment and exaggerated colors to depict his subjects, and the well-defined shadows characteristic of advertisements are almost always included in his work.
Wayne Thiebaud’s interest in art was inspired initially by cartoons and comic strips. The teenage Thiebaud established himself as a cartoonist, working for a brief time as an animator for the Walt Disney studios and drawing a regular comic strip during a World War II stint in the Air Force. He also worked as a poster designer and commercial artist in both California and New York before deciding to become a painter. Thiebaud’s formal art training was provided under the GI Bill at San José State College and the California State College in Sacramento. Thiebaud received a teaching appointment at Sacramento Junior College in 1951, while still in graduate school, and has since enjoyed a long and distinguished teaching career.
In 1956, Thiebaud moved to New York, where he was in the midst of the Abstract Expressionist movement. He was particularly interested in work by Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline, but fashioned his own approach to art, adapting the thick pigments used by the abstract expressionists to his own subjects and style. Having returned to California, by the early 1960s Thiebaud’s best-known works, colloquial paintings of food and consumer goods, had emerged in mature form. The thick, insistent textures and the playful colors Thiebaud uses for his commonplace objects and their enframing shadows challenge our perceptions of art subjects and meaning. They are still life paintings, but with a difference. Although his works are often classified as part of the American pop art movement, Thiebaud also painted portraits, but even these retained his signature broad treatment of light and shadow, thick paint, and bright Kool-Aid colors.
In 1972, Thiebaud settled permanently in San Francisco and added paintings of the landscape and city views to his subject matter. Using the unique geography of the Bay Area for inspiration, Thiebaud’s landscapes are dramatic representations distinguished by forms plunging at breathtaking angles into or across space and rendered in bold patterns of color. His still-life paintings reflect the continuity and visual connections between past and present.
© 2018. All images are copyrighted © by Wayne Thiebaud. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained.
Wayne Thiebaud’s interest in art was inspired initially by cartoons and comic strips. The teenage Thiebaud established himself as a cartoonist, working for a brief time as an animator for the Walt Disney studios and drawing a regular comic strip during a World War II stint in the Air Force. He also worked as a poster designer and commercial artist in both California and New York before deciding to become a painter. Thiebaud’s formal art training was provided under the GI Bill at San José State College and the California State College in Sacramento. Thiebaud received a teaching appointment at Sacramento Junior College in 1951, while still in graduate school, and has since enjoyed a long and distinguished teaching career.
In 1956, Thiebaud moved to New York, where he was in the midst of the Abstract Expressionist movement. He was particularly interested in work by Willem de Kooning and Franz Kline, but fashioned his own approach to art, adapting the thick pigments used by the abstract expressionists to his own subjects and style. Having returned to California, by the early 1960s Thiebaud’s best-known works, colloquial paintings of food and consumer goods, had emerged in mature form. The thick, insistent textures and the playful colors Thiebaud uses for his commonplace objects and their enframing shadows challenge our perceptions of art subjects and meaning. They are still life paintings, but with a difference. Although his works are often classified as part of the American pop art movement, Thiebaud also painted portraits, but even these retained his signature broad treatment of light and shadow, thick paint, and bright Kool-Aid colors.
In 1972, Thiebaud settled permanently in San Francisco and added paintings of the landscape and city views to his subject matter. Using the unique geography of the Bay Area for inspiration, Thiebaud’s landscapes are dramatic representations distinguished by forms plunging at breathtaking angles into or across space and rendered in bold patterns of color. His still-life paintings reflect the continuity and visual connections between past and present.
© 2018. All images are copyrighted © by Wayne Thiebaud. The use of any image from this site is prohibited unless prior written permission is obtained.
Mr Wayne Thiebaud |
1961, Half Salmon |
1961, Pies |
1962, Around the Cakes |
1962, Confections |
1962, Deviled eggs |
1962, Salads, Sandwiches, and Desserts |
1962, Three Wind Toys |
1963, Bananas |
1963, Cakes |
1963, Cream Soups |
1963, Girl with Ice Cream Cone |
1964, Eyebrow Pencil |
1964, Lipstick Row |
1964, Lipsticks |
1964, Six Lollipops |
1964, Three Cones |
1965, Woman in Tub |
1966, Green Dress |
1966, Three Boats |
1966, Two Kneeling Figures |
1968, Sixteen Pies |
1968, Student |
1970, Boston Cremes |
1971, Four Cupcakes |
1972-75, Buffet |
1975, Shoe Rows |
1979, Lollipop Tree, |
1981, Various Cakes |
1982, Bowl of Cherries |
1985, Sunset Streets |
1985, Untitled (Two Ice Cream Scoops on Plate) |
1986, Cheese Slices |
1987, Two Paint Cans |
1989, Five Chocolate Cookies |
1990, Sardines |
1990. Paint cans |
1991, Sunglasses |
1991-92, Various Books |
1992-94, Dessert Tray |
1996, Bakery Case |
1996, Waterland |
1997, Flatland River |
1997, Lemon Cake |
1998, Yellow Mickey Mouse Cake |
2003, Two Flavors (Ice Cream Cone) |
2003, Valley Streets |
2005, Crackers |
2010, Tulip Sundaes |
2011, Two Cheese Cubes |
2012, Drumstick Dinner |
Artificial flowers |
Benign delight |
Cake Slice |
Hot dog with mustard |
Ice Cream Sundaes |
Living On Hope |
Neapolitan Meringue 1 |
Pancake Breakfast |
San Francisco road |
Two Wedding Cakes |
Watermelon Slice and Knife |
No comments:
Post a Comment