Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Wayne Thiebaud: Selected Works (1963 - 1988)


+ JMJ +


Wayne Thiebaud, drawing cartoons featuring the character "Aleck" at Mather Army Air Field, 1944.   [Source

Things About Thiebaud


Thiebaud, Wayne - Display Cakes - Bay Area Figurative Movement - Oil on canvas - Other/Unknown theme - San Francisco Museum of Modern Art - San Francisco, CA, USA

Display Cakes, 1963
Oil on canvas
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art
 [Source

Wayne Thiebaud was born in 1920 in Mesa, Arizona. He moved with his family to Long Beach, California, at age nine.

Thiebaud, Wayne - Balls - Bay Area Figurative Movement - Oil on canvas - Other/Unknown theme - Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden - Washington, DC, USA

Balls, 1963
Oil on Canvas
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Washington, DC, USA
[Source]  

Thiebaud grew up during the Great Depression. He was a boy scout and worked in restaurants.

 

Lemon Meringue, 1964
From the series, Delights, 1965 
Etching and Drypoint on Paper
[Source]

In high school, he played basketball.

 

Half Cakes, 1964
Woodcut on Paper

He took art classes and started drawing cartoons.

 

Stick Candy, 1964
Etching on Paper
[Source]

 He also worked on stage sets for theater productions.

 

Color Lipstick, 1964/1988 
Hard-ground and Drypoint Etching
[Source]

Perhaps this experience with stage lighting gave him the idea to put bright light in his paintings.


Cherry Stand, from "Delights," 1964-65

As a teenager Thiebaud held several jobs, making posters for a movie theater and painting signs.

Lemon Cake - Wayne Thiebaud

Lemon Cake, 1964
 [Source]

One summer, Thiebaud worked in the animation department at the Walt Disney Studios. 

Three Strawberry Shakes - Wayne Thiebaud

 Three Strawberry Shakes, 1964
 [Source]

He drew the "in-between frames" (drawings positioned between key changes in movement in order to make animation play smooth) for such cartoons as Goofy and Pinocchio.

Thiebaud, Wayne - Man Sitting - Back View - Bay Area Figurative Movement - Oil on canvas - Portrait - Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art - St. Joseph, MO, USA

Man Sitting - Back View, 1964
Oil on canvas
Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art
St. Joseph, MO, USA

In the 1940s, Thiebaud went to junior college and then served in the Army as an artist and cartoonist.


Eight Lipsticks, 1964

He married and settled in Los Angeles and worked as a commercial artist and illustrator. 
 

Powder with Puff, 1966
Milwaukee Art Museum 
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA 
 [Source]

At age twenty-nine, he went back to college and received degrees in art, art history, and education.

Glassed Candy - Wayne Thiebaud

Glassed Candy, 1969 
Pastel on Paper
 [Source]

He began teaching art to college students and decided to become a serious painter himself.



Glasses, 1970-71
 From Seven Still-Lifes and a Rabbit
Lithograph in Colors 

[Source

In 1961, Thiebaud's food paintings—images of cakes, pies, candy, gumball machines, and deli counters painted with thick paint in bright colors—were exhibited in New York.  


Gumball Machine, 1971
From Seven Still Lifes and a Silver Landscape portfolio
Color Linocut
 [Source]

They were a big hit!

Shoe Rows - Wayne Thiebaud

Shoe Rows, 1975
Aquatint / Etching
 [Source]

Though some scholars called Thiebaud a Pop artist because he painted popular consumer goods, he said he painted them out of nostalgia.

 

Shoe Rows, 1975
[Source]

They reminded him of his boyhood and the best of America.


Cakes, 1963
Oil on canvas

 [Source]

Thiebaud explained:  "My subject matter was a genuine sort of experience that came out of my life, particularly the American world in which I was privileged to be . . . . I would really think of the bakery counters, of the way the counter was lit, where the pies were placed, but I wanted just a piece of the experience. From when I worked in restaurants . . . [it was] always poetic to me."



Big Suckers, 1971
Private Collection
[Source

 Thiebaud painted things other than food.
 

Candy Cane, 1971
Unique Lithograph in Colors

He made still lifes of neckties, eyeglasses, lipsticks, even cows and dogs.


Candy Stick Rows, 1980
Color Lithograph
 [Source

He also painted large portraits of human figures, applying thick paint in bright colors against stark white backgrounds.


Big Candy, 1980
Color Lithograph
 [Source]

Thiebaud went on to paint cityscapes—from the steep hills of San Francisco to the colorful landscapes of the Sacramento Valley in California. 


 Dark Cake,1983
Color Woodblock
[Source]

Wayne Thiebaud retired from full-time teaching in 1990. He lives in Northern California and continues to paint.


City Edge, 1988
Spitbite Aquatint and Soft-ground Etching
 [Source]




Friday, November 9, 2012

Wayne Thiebaud (American) ~ Art and Bio # 1


+ JMJ +

Thiebaud, Wayne - American artist

Wayne Thiebaud (b. 1920)
[Source]

Biographical Text from Metro Art Work:

Wayne Thiebaud is an American painter whose most famous works are of cakes, pastries, toys and lipsticks. His last name is pronounced "Tee-bo."

Wayne Thiebaud, Sausalito

Sausalito, 1954
Watercolor and Pencil
[Source

He is associated with the Pop art movement because of his interest in objects of mass culture, however, his works, executed during the fifties and sixties, slightly predate the works of the classic pop artists. He has also been seen, due to his true to life representations, as a predecessor to Photorealism.


“Pies, Pies, Pies” (1961)
Oil on Canvas
[Source

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. 



Delicatessen Trays, 1961 
Oil on Canvas  [Source]

Thiebaud was born to Mormon parents on November 23, 1920 in Mesa, Arizona, U.S.A.

Desserts

Desserts, 1962
Oil on Canvas
[Source] 

His family moved to Long Beach, California when he was six months old. Thiebaud spent over ten years working in New York and Hollywood as a cartoonist and advertisement designer.

Delicatessen Counter - Wayne Thiebaud

Delicatessen Counter, 1962
Oil on Canvas   
 [Source

These stints were interrupted for four years, from 1942 to 1946, while Thiebaud served as a member of the United States Army Air Force. Wayne Thiebaud's formal art training was paid for by the G.I. Bill.



Cake Counter, 1963
Oil on Canvas 

[Source]  

He studied at San Jose State College and the California State University, Sacramento. 

Wayne Thiebaud, Pie Counter, 1963  64.11
 
Pie Counter, 1963
Oil on Canvas

[Source]

He received a teaching appointment at Sacramento Junior College in 1951, while still in graduate school. He remained there for eight years after which he joined the University of California, Davis as an art professor, where he is a professor today.  He currently (2007) teaches one class per year.

http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2578/3802215290_d3efaeb5a3.jpg 

Yo-yos, 1963
Oil on Canvas
[Source]   

Thiebaud's first solo exhibition was at the Crocker Art Gallery in Sacramento, and between the years of 1954 and 1957, he produced eleven educational films for which he was awarded the Scholastic Art Prize in 1961.

Cake Slices - Wayne Thiebaud

Cake Slices, 1963
[Source] 

In the spring of 1962, Thiebaud exhibited for the first time at the Allan Stone Gallery in New York. 

Wayne Thiebaud, Banana Splits from Delights Portfolio

Banana Splits from Delights Portfolio, 1964
 Etching
[Source

This exhibition was followed by his first solo museum show - in San Francisco at the M. H. de Young Memorial Museum. 


Four Ice Cream Cones, 1964
Oil on Canvas
[Source

Today, Thiebaud's art dealer continues to be Allan Stone (1932-2006), the man who gave him his first "break" decades ago. The Allan Stone Gallery is currently located in New York City.

Lemon Meringue Pie - Wayne Thiebaud

Lemon Meringue Pie, 1964
[Source]

Later that year he was included in the landmark group exhibition, New Realists, at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York.



Lunch Table, 1964
Oil on canvas
[Source]

Thiebaud is best known for his paintings of production line objects found in diners and cafeterias, such as pies and pastries.



Suckers, 1967
Lithograph 
[Source]

Many wonder if he spent time working in the food industry, and in fact he did. As a young man in Long Beach, he worked at a cafe named Mile High and Red Hot, where "Mile High" was ice cream and "Red Hot" was a hot dog.


Half Cakes, 1970
From Seven Still Lifes and a Silver Landscape Portfolio
Black & White Silkscreen
[Source]

Wayne Thiebaud, Gumball Machine

Gumball Machine, 1971
Linoleum Cut
[Source]

He was associated with the Pop art painters because of his interest in objects of mass culture, however, his works, executed during the fifties and sixties, slightly predate the works of the classic pop artists, suggesting that Thiebaud may have had a great influence on the movement.



Large Sucker, 1971
From Seven Still Lifes and a Silver Landscape portfolio
Color Lithograph
[Source]

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.


Cake Slice, 1979
 [Source

In addition to pastries, Thiebaud has painted landscapes, streetscapes, and popular characters such as Mickey Mouse.

Wayne Thiebaud, Daffodil

Daffodil, 1979
 Soft ground etching and aquatint 
[Source]

His recent paintings such as 'Sunset Streets' (1985) and 'Flatland River' (1997) are noted for their hyper realism, and are in some ways similar to Edward Hopper's work, who was fascinated with mundane scenes from everyday American life.



Boxed Balls, 1979
From Recent Etchings II Portfolio
  Aquatint and Drypoint Etching
[Source]

Thiebaud includes Giorgio Morandi as one of his inspirations. He also admires the work of Vermeer, Diego Velasquez, Degas and lots of other talented artists.


Wednesday, October 3, 2012

Carol Marine : Paintings


+ JMJ +

Carol Marine


Carol Marine was born in Sheridan, Montana, and raised in the very small town of Harper, Texas in a dome house designed and built by her parents. Her mother is a weaver and a potter, and her father builds boats. Her parents always assured their children they could do anything in their lives they wanted, and that it was better to have a job they enjoyed than to make a lot of money. Carol’s family has been her greatest influence and inspiration. [Source]


Simple Pleasures - 8x16in. - oil on canvas - SOLD

After graduating from Harper high school, Carol spent four and a half years at the University of Texas in Austin. She graduated in the fall of 2001 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in Studio Art, and a focus in painting. [Source]

Dutch Blues

A Quiet Moment - 20x24in. - oil on canvas - SOLD

During Carol’s college days she met and married David Marine, with whom she now lives in Austin, TX. David is her greatest fan and most helpful critic. [Source]

Blue Egg

Blue Egg - 6x6in. - oil on canvas - SOLD

With this union Carol acquired two, lovely step-daughters, Sophie and Maddie. On April 4, 2005, Carol and David adopted Wayne Jacob Marine, then just 2 days old. [Source]

Blue Egg

Yearly Checkup - 6x6in. - oil on canvas - SOLD

On October 5th, 2006, Carol began the practice of doing one small painting a day and posting them on her blog. Each of these small paintings is for auction on Ebay & through her ebay store. [Source]

Blue Egg

Only Oranges Left  - 6x6in. - oil on canvas - SOLD
 
Since then Carol has begun teaching workshops across the country about daily painting, and is a member of Daily Paintworks, a distinguished group of daily painters. Carol divides her time between painting in and out of the studio (out with Plein Air Austin), teaching and family adventures. [Source]

Blue Egg

Grape Reflections - 6x6in. - oil on canvas - SOLD

Where/how did you learn to paint?

"I went to the University of Texas at Austin but learned nothing there. There was no focus on improving skill from the professors, but rather impressing critics, which I have no interest in. I want to make a living doing what I love most - painting! I learned by poring over art magazines and books, studying and copying work that struck me, and experimenting a lot. Painting every day is the best thing I do towards improving!"
[Source]