ANDREW WYETH
12 July 1917 - 16 January 2009, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, USA
His father was the famous illustrator N.C. Wyeth and with him he began as a painter using watercolors and dry-brush watercolor techniques.
His first exhibition happened in 1936 at the Art Alliance of Philadelphia.
In 1990 the President George W. Bush awarded him with the Congressional Gold Medal.
Also awarded with pieces like Christina's World, A crow flew by, and the Helga Pictures.
Most of his works are in important museum collections, such as the National Museum of Modern Art in Tokyo, the Hermitage Museum in St Petersburg, the Palazzo Reale in Milan, the Académie des Beaux Arts in Paris.
Study for overflow
"Ice storm", 1971
"Islanders defter"
"Young America"
"Maine fisherman", Walt Anderson
"Master bedroom"
"Prussian-born neighbor", 1971
"Ides of March"
"Barefoot"
"Christina's world"
"Man and the Moon", 1990
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