From Deseret News archives:
Still Thiebaud after all these years
Show looks at artist's early works
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A painting that best incorporates all of the artist's craft is "Two Kneeling Figures" (1966). The staid composition, emotionless features on the women, the "lickable" surface quality of the paint, the single color background, all these make the piece a highlight of the show.
"With work that is both traditional and modern, Thiebaud fuses together different styles to create paintings that are relaxed yet playful," said Weiss. "His paintings reference and respect other artists, styles and media while still creating a new and one-of-a-kind experience for the viewer."
For example, the left figure in his "Beach Boys" (1959) is remarkably similar to Cezanne's "The Bather" (1885). Yet in the context of the new painting, it only becomes a reference, bringing a knowing and approving smile to those familiar with the Cezanne.
Thiebaud's method of incorporating and reworking another's image is often employed by modern artists, particularly those in Pop Art, a school to which Thiebaud was relegated by art historians when he was included in the 1962 group exhibit, "New Painting of Common Objects," at the Pasadena Art Museum. Other artists in the show were Andy Warhol, Roy Lichtenstein and Ed Ruscha.
But Thiebaud can't be pigeonholed. "Overwhelmingly upbeat, his brightly colored paintings contrast with the satirical pessimism of most Pop Art," Romney wrote in the recent issue of Fine Art Connoisseur.
According to Romney, Thiebaud was painting consumer objects long before Warhol. And while some of his work is illusionistic, it is not realistic.
In the exhibit's concluding gallery, a selection of beach paintings are displayed, many for the first time in this traveling exhibit.
As a onetime lifeguard and professed beach junkie, Thiebaud is able to resurrect sand, sun and water with playful chutzpa all from memory; the paradox of the frisky and serene is intriguing and visually very satisfying.
However, upon first experiencing these paintings, you might wonder as to the reason for the decreased emphasis on the figure. The paintings work well as figure ground relationship statements, but after viewing Thiebaud's "Ballroom Trio IV" (2003-07), you wonder if the artist resorting to the technique of reducing his characters to mere blotches is due to his diminished figurative skill, something some artists face in their advancing years.
Hopefully, Thiebaud has simply returned to his earlier expressionist roots, as in "Beach Boys" (1959).
If you attend "Wayne Thiebaud: 70 Years of Paintings" thinking you will encounter a collection of the artist's greatest pieces, you will be disappointed. However, what is on display is a praiseworthy show that fills in blanks and fleshed out a career; we are offered a more comprehensive look into how Thiebaud became Thiebaud.
E-mail: gag@desnews.com
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Recent comments
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