Description:

Warhol Andy 1928 - 1987 Andy Warhol and Jamie Wyeth sign the promo for their exhibition, a limited edition #10 / 100
An exhibition promotional piece for "Andy Warhol & Jamie Wyeth Portraits of Each Other", an exhibit held at the Brandywine River Museum, Brandywine Conservancy, Chadds Ford Pennsylvania. The folded promo displays a black and white photo of Andy Warhol and Jamie Wyeth to the front, the exhibition information on the first inner leaf, and then two stunning color prints, each artistically rendered by one another, and each boldly hand signed under their respective images "Andy Warhol" and Jamie Wyeth "Jamie Wyeth" with a limited edition number of "10 / 100". 8" x 9.75" on card stock, opening to a full size of 23.5" x 9.75". Near fine condition.


A unique piece with an exhibit at a highly relevant location as both his grandfather N.C. Wyeth, and father Andew Wyeth called Chadds Ford Township, PA their home. The rural Brandywine River area that lies between Delaware and Pennsylvania is just a few miles from the Brandywine Museum, a repository of just about everything Wyeth sits there today.

A fascinating exhibit of the dichotomy of the two artists though contemporaries, the artists James Browning Wyeth and Andy Warhol could not be more diametrically opposed. Jamie, as a third-generation member of the famed Wyeth family, celebrated figures in the revival of realism in American art and continued his family tradition as a portraitist and landscape painter, whose naturalistic approach to painting produced highly detailed and visually complex work that captured life in rural Maine, Delaware and Pennsylvania. Andy Warhol, on the other hand, is considered to be the ultimate symbol of Pop. His early paintings presented mass-produced consumer goods, while his later art evolved into mass produced objects in and of themselves, as he applied a factory-like, assembly-line method of production to his silkscreens, which treat such topics as consumer culture, fame (or infamy) and celebrity. Wyeth was an introverted, enigmatic character, while Warhol was transformed into a symbol of the New York social scene with his Factory entourage and was revered as a popular culture sensation. Despite differences in personality and artistic philosophy, the two artists expressed deep respect for each other's vision and work. Warhol particularly commended Wyeth's impeccable technique, saying, "I love his work. I always wished I could paint like him." Wyeth had always had a particular fascination with Warhol's earlier paintings, seeing certain parallels between Warhol's representational paintings and his own work. He stated, "I thought that the Brillo boxes and the soup cans of Warhol's had a certain power to them. Warhol had taken the actual object, not really messed around with it or abstracted it in any way and it had a certain vitality. Why abstract the object if the object is what hits you?" This mutual interest in the other's work resulted in a portrait-exchange between the two artists in 1975. The outcome of this collaboration, a collection of portraits and studies that were completed in each artist's signature style and technique, was exhibited.

Warhol, the "Patriarch of Pop," is presented in a hyper-naturalistic manner, with imperfect, blemished skin, disheveled hair, and an expression that seems to suggest that he was abruptly taken by surprise. By the 1970s there was a wealth of images of Warhol circulating, making his carefully constructed image instantly recognizable to all. However, Wyeth seems to have captured a side to Warhol previously unseen that almost shockingly contrasts other representations of the most famous man in the art world. On the other hand, Warhol transforms Wyeth, a rural kid from Wilmington, Delaware, who perfected his technique by painting farm animals and landscapes, into a sort of pop star. Wyeth's pose evokes a sense of self-possessed confidence immortalized for all time into the ranks of Warhol's other portraits of Mick Jagger, Elizabeth Taylor and John Lennon.

The tri-fold, in exceptional condition, shows two of the stunning pieces by the artists, each strongly contrasting each other. Scarce signed by both artists.

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