Andrew Wyeth: Human Nature

March 01, 2025 - June 15, 2025
Andrew Wyeth (1917–2009), Nogeeshik, 1972, tempera. Collection of the Wyeth Foundation for American Art. © 2025 Wyeth Foundation for American Art/Artists Rights Society (ARS)
Andrew Wyeth (1917–2009), Roasted Chestnuts, 1956, tempera. Collection of the Brandywine Museum of Art, Gift of Mimi Haskell, 1971. © 2025 Wyeth Foundation for American Art/Artists Rights Society (ARS)
Andrew Wyeth (1917–2009), Tundra Study, 1993, watercolor. Collection of the Wyeth Foundation for American Art B3194. © 2025 Wyeth Foundation for American Art/Artists Rights Society (ARS)
Andrew Wyeth (1917–2009), Miss Olson, 1952, tempera. Brandywine Museum of Art, Gift of Alida R. Messinger, 2024. © 2025 Wyeth Foundation for American Art/Artists Rights Society (ARS)
Andrew Wyeth (1917–2009), Self-Portrait, 1939, tempera. Collection of the Wyeth Foundation for American Art B0008. © 2025 Wyeth Foundation for American Art/Artists Rights Society (ARS)

One of the artist Andrew Wyeth’s enduring legacies is his highly original response to the subject of the human body. Alongside his iconic landscapes and visionary responses to buildings, botany, and beyond, his figure paintings and drawings offer particular insight into how this unique creative journey took shape, and how he was connected to the history of art. 

The rarely seen paintings and drawings on view in Human Nature reveal an artist who was steeped in the tradition of Western art, engaged in a diligent study of the human form via the long-tested methods of sketching from live models and plaster casts, and who found in his portrait subjects ways of evoking enigmatic narratives and inner lives.

The works in this exhibition, drawn from the Brandywine and Wyeth Foundation collections as well as one exciting loan from a private collection, present a unique opportunity to understand Wyeth’s eye. Case studies include early figure drawings made in his father’s studio, self-portraits, intimate depictions of close family members, a little known and fascinating body of commissioned portraits, a broad representation of his mature practice including many major figural temperas and watercolors, and a final section on how he approach the nude figure. One highlight is the loan of Wyeth’s portrait of Professor Joyce Hill Stoner, a leading art conservator who shares in the exhibition’s wall texts some firsthand reflection on the process of being painted by Wyeth. Visitors will come away with new understanding of a remarkable lifelong practice that clarifies the operations and values at work across his art. 

This exhibition is made possible by the Brandywine's partnership with the Wyeth Foundation for American Art.