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Jamie Wyeth b. 1946
Fred Hughes and Andy Warhol, 2005Oil on canvas48 x 30 inches
121.9 x 76.2 cmSigned at lower right: J. WyethThe deaths of Warhol, in 1987, and Nureyev, in 1995, were moments for Wyeth to process all that he had absorbed of his famous subjects. From the remove of decades,...The deaths of Warhol, in 1987, and Nureyev, in 1995, were moments for Wyeth to process all that he had absorbed of his famous subjects. From the remove of decades, he could call up discrete moments and arrange them into larger contexts. He painted his friends again as if they still lived, as the stuff of elaborate dreams, accommodating them into the surrealist direction that his painting was taking.
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Before the sale of Warhol’s vast estate in 1988, few outside his closest circle of friends knew that the artist who riffed on commercial art and mocked America’s consumerism had surrounded himself with bounteous beautiful furnishings, ethnographic and folk arts, and kitschy things in the sumptuous setting of an historic townhouse on Manhattan’s Upper East Side. [1] In advance of its disassembly, the townhouse was opened to old friends for one last extended party. The media event that was the ten-day sale was full Warhol, back from the dead and claiming the limelight once more. In 2002, Pittsburgh’s Warhol Museum featured a large array of these objects again in a groundbreaking exhibition and catalogue that for the first time looked at Warhol in the context of his possessions. The spirit of Warhol was newly animated by these events. It returned to haunt Wyeth’s imagination.
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The Factory’s long-time manager, Fred Hughes, helped to build Warhol’s collections, and as executor of Warhol’s estate, he had orchestrated the sale. Wyeth was always close with Hughes, too. It is understandable that he should appear alongside Warhol in Wyeth’s waking dreams. In a double portrait, Fred Hughes and Andy Warhol, the always stylish Hughes stands beside Warhol beneath the mounted moose head that dominated the dining room in the Factory. The particular presentation of the pair here is significant. Warhol holds his ubiquitous tape recorder. Hughes, by his foresighted move to sell Warhol’s possessions to create the Andy Warhol Foundation, was the one who ultimately preserved Warhol’s legacy, his archives, the thousands of reels of audio tape included.
—Patricia Junker, excerpt from Jamie Wyeth, Andy Warhol, Rudolf Nureyev: Masquerade, Schoelkopf Gallery, 2024[1] The sale, at Sotheby’s, New York, spanned ten days, from April 23-May 3, 1988; totaled over 10,000 individual objects; and spread over two acres of exhibition space. See John W.. Smith, ed., Possession Obsession; Andy Warhol and Collecting (Pittsburgh: The Andy Warhol Museum, 2002).
Provenance
The artist;
Private collection
Exhibitions
Brandywine River Museum, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, Factory Work: Warhol, Wyeth and Basquiat, September 9-November 19, 2006, no. 51, illus. in color, p. 31
Adelson Galleries, New York, Seven Deadly Sins & Recent Works by Jamie Wyeth, March 14-April 18, 2008, p. 39, illus. in color
Mona Bismarck Foundation, Paris, The Wyeths, Trois generations d'artistes americains, November 10, 2011-February. 12, 2012, illus. in color, p. 191
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Brandywine River Museum of Art, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania; San Antonio Museum of Art, San Antonio, Texas; and the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas, Jamie Wyeth, 2014-2015
Literature
Factory Work: Warhol, Wyeth, Basquiat, Rockland, Maine: Farnsworth Art Musem, 2006, no. 51, illus. in color, p. 31
Elliot Bostwick Davis, Jamie Wyeth, Boston: MFA Publications, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, 2014, pp. 67, 74, fig. 28, illus. in color
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