Monday, March 29, 2021

Interesting Art Stories: 48. Christina's World, Andrew Wyeth, ACJ Art Academy


 











 

How are you?

Currently, I am introducing the stories about various artists and their paintings with the title Interesting Art Stories.

The 48th story is Christina's World by Andrew Wyeth.

Christina's World” is one of the most famous American paintings of the mid-20th century, painted in 1948 by American painter Andrew Wyeth. 


Andrew Wyeth












It is a tempera work painted in a realist style, depicting a woman semi-reclining on the ground in a treeless field, looking up at a gray house on the horizon adjoining a barn and several small outbuildings. 

Today, it is one of the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art in New York.


Museum of Modern Art (MOMA), New York
City, USA
















The woman in the painting is Anna Christina Olson, who was unable to walk from about 30 years old due to a degenerative muscular disorder, but because she was resolutely opposed to the use of a wheelchair, she would crawl everywhere. Wyeth was inspired to paint the painting when he saw her crawling across a field as he was watching from a window in the house.


Christina and Andrew












Wyeth, who had a summer home in the area, maintained a friendly relationship with Olson, using her and her younger brother as the models of his paintings from 1940 to 1968.

The house depicted in the painting is known as the Olson House in Cushing, Maine, USA, and is open to the public, operated by the Farnsworth Art Museum


Olson House, Cushing, Maine












Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, Maine













First exhibited in 1948 at the Macbeth Gallery in Manhattan, the painting received little attention from critics at the time. However, Alfred Barr, the founding director of the Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), purchased the painting and promoted it at MoMA, which gradually gained popularity over the years. 

Today, it is considered an icon of American art and is often perceived as the embodiment of a strong sense of longing.

The painting has been used in various fields of popular culture.

In Arthur C. Clarke's novel “2001: A Space Odyssey," it is one of two paintings hanging on the living room wall of an elegant, anonymous hotel suite, to which the astronaut David Bowman is transported after passing through the Star Gate.


2001 A Space Odyssey, Arthur C. Clarke

















The painting is also referenced in one of the posters of “The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)”.


A poster of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

















The cover of issue #43 of Garth Ennis's comic series “Preacher” is a variation of the painting, and a scene in the 1994 film "Forrest Gump" was inspired by the painting.


Christina's World, Preacher (comics) #43
























A scene in Forrest Gump










Thank you.


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