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Current Exhibitions

Holiday 2024: The Art of Gifting
November 4, 2024 - January 31, 2025
Virtual
A Selection of Sculptures
October 23, 2024 - February 28, 2025
Virtual
Hans Hofmann
August 14, 2024 - February 28, 2025
Palm Desert, CA
Art Under $100,000
July 25, 2024 - January 31, 2025
Palm Desert, CA
Legacy of the Land: Georgia O’Keeffe and Emily Kame Kngwarreye
July 10, 2024 - January 31, 2025
Jackson Hole, WY
Sound and Spectacle: Harry Bertoia and George Rickey
June 26 - December 31, 2024
Jackson Hole, WY
Sir Winston Churchill: Making Art, Making History
February 20 - December 31, 2024
Virtual
Ansel Adams: Affirmation of Life
December 1, 2023 - December 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
No Other Land: A Century of American Landscapes
September 21, 2023 - December 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Alexander Calder: Shaping a Primary Universe
August 23, 2023 - January 31, 2025
Palm Desert, CA
Georgia O’Keeffe and Ansel Adams: Modern Art, Modern Friendship
July 13, 2023 - January 31, 2025
Palm Desert, CA
Your Heart’s Blood: Intersections of Art and Literature
September 12, 2022 - December 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Meeting Life: N.C. Wyeth and the MetLife Murals
July 18, 2022 - December 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol Polaroids: Wicked Wonders
December 13, 2021 - December 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA

2024

Discovering Creativity: American Art Masters
January 10 - March 17, 2024
Ann Norton Sculpture Gardens - West Palm Beach, FL
Paintings of Dorothy Hood
March 18 - July 19, 2024
Palm Desert, CA

2023

Figurative Masters of the Americas
January 4 - February 12, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
First Circle: Circles in Art
February 14, 2023 - August 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Florals for Spring, Groundbreaking
May 8, 2023 - August 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol: All is Pretty
August 17, 2023 - August 31, 2024
Jackson Hole, WY
Art of the American West: A Prominent Collection
August 24, 2023 - August 31, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
Picasso: Beyond the Canvas
October 4, 2023 - April 30, 2024
Palm Desert, CA

2022

Abstract Expressionism: Transcending the Radical
January 12, 2022 - January 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Georgia O’Keeffe and Marsden Hartley: Modern Minds
February 1, 2022 - February 28, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
My Own Skin: Frida Kahlo and Diego Rivera
June 16 - December 31, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
N.C. Wyeth: A Decade of Painting
September 29, 2022 - March 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Alexander Calder: Painting the Cosmos
March 2 - August 12, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
Josef Albers: The Heart of Painting
May 12 - November 30, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
Paper Cut: Unique Works on Paper
April 27, 2022 - October 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
More to Life: Impressionist Dialogues from Monet and Beyond
August 17, 2022 - August 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Alexander Calder: A Universe of Painting
August 10, 2022 - August 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Claude Monet: An Impressionist Genius
August 18 - October 31, 2022
Jackson Hole, WY
Marc Chagall: The Color of Love
September 8 - October 12, 2022
Jackson Hole, WY
Picasso - Prints and Works on Paper
September 1 - October 12, 2022
Jackson Hole, WY
Impressionism at Heather James Fine Art
September 1 - October 31, 2022
Jackson Hole, WY

2021

It Was Acceptable in the 80s
April 27, 2021 - August 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Elaine and Willem de Kooning: Painting in the Light
August 3, 2021 - January 31, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
James Rosenquist: Potent Pop
June 7, 2021 - January 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
American Eye: Selections from the Pardee Collection
February 28 - December 31, 2021
Palm Desert, CA
Moore! Moore! Moore! Henry Moore and Sculpture
March 3, 2021 - April 30, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
Mercedes Matter: A Miraculous Quality
March 22, 2021 - June 30, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
A Beautiful Time: American Art in the Gilded Age
June 24, 2021 - August 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Abstract Expressionism: The Persistent Women
November 1, 2021 - August 31, 2022
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol: Glamour at the Edge
October 27, 2021 - September 30, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
All We Have Seen: Impressionist Landscapes from Monet to Kleitsch
August 9, 2021 - September 30, 2022
Jackson Hole, WY

2020

Jewels of Impressionism and Modern Art
February 19 - October 31, 2020
Palm Desert, CA
The Gloria Luria Collection
March 16, 2020 - October 31, 2021
Palm Desert, CA
Norman Zammitt: The Progression of Color
March 19, 2020 - February 28, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
Pop Figures: Mel Ramos and Tom Wesselmann
March 26, 2020 - April 30, 2021
Palm Desert, CA
Cool Britannia: The Young British Artists
April 2 - September 30, 2020
Palm Desert, CA
Jewish Modernism Part 2: Figuration from Chagall to Norman
April 30, 2020 - December 31, 2021
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol Polaroids: Bring It to the Runway
December 10, 2020 - December 31, 2021
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol Polaroids: All That Glitters
December 10, 2020 - December 31, 2021
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol Polaroids: Me, Myself, & I
December 10, 2020 - December 31, 2021
Palm Desert, CA
Andy Warhol Polaroids: Ars Longa
December 10, 2020 - December 31, 2021
Palm Desert, CA
Jewish Modernism Part 1: Abstraction from Gottlieb to Schnabel
April 23, 2020 - April 30, 2024
New York, NY
Alexander Calder: Bold Gouaches
March 25, 2020 - March 2, 2022
New York, NY

2019

Paul Jenkins: Coloring the Phenomenal
December 27, 2019 - March 31, 2023
Palm Desert, CA
The Californians
November 1, 2019 - February 14, 2020
Palm Desert, CA
Irving Norman: Dark Matter
November 27, 2019 - June 30, 2024
Palm Desert, CA
We Were Always Here: Japanese-American Post-War Pioneers of Art
April 4 - July 15, 2019
San Francisco, CA

2018

N.C. Wyeth: Paintings and Illustrations
February 1 - May 31, 2018
Palm Desert, CA
The Paintings of Sir Winston Churchill
March 21 - May 30, 2018
Palm Desert, CA
The Paintings of Sir Winston Churchill
June 1 - July 27, 2018
San Francisco, CA
The Paintings of Sir Winston Churchill
August 1 - September 16, 2018
Jackson Hole, WY
de Kooning x de Kooning
November 8, 2018 - February 28, 2019
New York, NY
Sam Francis: From Dusk to Dawn
November 15, 2018 - April 29, 2019
Palm Desert, CA
Wojciech Fangor: The Early 1960s
April 19 - June 30, 2018
New York, NY

2016

Ferrari and Futurists: An Italian Look at Speed
November 21, 2016 - January 30, 2017
Palm Desert, CA
Norman Rockwell: The Artist at Work
June 30 - September 30, 2016
Jackson Hole, WY

2015

Alexander Calder
November 21, 2015 - May 28, 2016
Palm Desert, CA

2014

Masters of California Impressionism
November 22, 2014 - May 23, 2015
Palm Desert, CA

2011

Painterly Abstraction: Spheres of AbEx
November 25, 2011 - May 31, 2012
Palm Desert, CA

2010

Masters of Impressionism and Modern Art
November 20, 2010 - September 25, 2011
Palm Desert, CA

2009

Picasso
November 20, 2009 - May 25, 2010
Palm Desert, CA

Images: Copyright ©Pacific SunTrading Company, Courtesy Frank E. Fowler and Warren Adelson

“It’s a moment that I’m after, a fleeting moment, but not a frozen moment.” – Andrew Wyeth

History

As one of the most celebrated and successful artists of all time, Andrew Wyeth exhibited transparent watercolors to great acclaim and by the 1940s had mastered the precisely descriptive drybrush and tempera styles. Together, the three distinct mediums brought acclaim that eclipsed that of his father Newell Convers Wyeth, perhaps the greatest American illustrator of its golden age. When, in 1948, Andrew painted Christina’s World, he and Jackson Pollock were fiercely independent artists who peacefully coexisted at opposite poles of art in America. But that was all to change. Two decade later, Wyeth, the artist a New York University art professor called, “the last authentic survivor of a very endangered 19th century species” became an institutional pariah at the expense of art critics who reslotted him as an old-fashioned artist living in a different century. Wanda Corn, wrote the exhibition catalogue for his first west coast show at the De Young Museum in 1973. She wondered why he did not suffer at their expense. “But he didn’t really. He never stopped making pictures. He used to say, ‘I only know one thing to do. I only know how to make art.”

When Andrew Wyeth hinted he had a cache of secret drawings and paintings he did not wish to be seen, the words ‘secret’ and ‘hidden’ were interpreted as ‘discovery’ and ‘treasure’ by the lead on the story, Art and Antiques editor Jeffrey Schaire. He was granted the scoop, the story broke a year later in August 1986, and Andrew Wyeth’s fifteen year obsession with a mysterious woman named Helga spilled beyond the art world and became an international news phenomenon. Picasso never graced the covers of both Time and Newsweek the same week, but Andrew Wyeth did. Other news followed: a collector, or, rather an investor, Leonard B. Andrews purchased the collection in its entirety, The National Gallery came calling with the promise of an exhibition of over half of the 240 drawings, drywash and tempera works and most astonishingly, millions of impressions of the tempera, Braids, all printed within two weeks during the summer of 1986 were hastily readied to be circulated making it along with Warhol’s soup cans, one of the most recognizable images in the world.

Wyeth stated he was drawn to “Helga because of her German qualities: her strong, determined stride, the green Loden coat she often wore, and the long braids of her golden hair.” He first saw her walking up his neighbor’s driveway and was instantly infatuated. When explaining his fifteen year obsession, he said, “I have to be enamored. Smitten. That’s what happened when I saw Helga.” Helga, in turn was flattered. She had spent her youth in a Prussian convent, married John Testorf, a German-born naturalized American citizen and she now served as caretaker for that neighbor the elderly farmer Karl Kuerner. Clothed or unclothed, Helga accepted the challenge, an accommodating muse sitting with undying patience for countless hours, every pose becoming an unabashedly intimate conversation between artist and model. Yet as Helga insisted, if it was love, it was unconsummated love, a revelation that confirmed what Andrew once said, ‘people are going to think it’s just sexual love, but it’s not.’

The Prussian is a drybrushed watercolor that has both the toned feel of a watercolor, and the precise, dry quality of built-up layered paintings of tempera that Wyeth compared to “a cocoon-like feeling of dry lostness.” It was painted in 1974, the third year of the Wyeth/Helga collaboration, one of only nine drybrushes from the suite inclusive of 4 tempera paintings, 63 watercolors, and 164 pencil sketches that occupied the two co-conspirators for fifteen years. Her gaze is icy-blue, turned from the viewer, downward and aslant, her countenance inscrutable. If one did not know better, the effect might impress as having a surreal quality. As a realist painting, its layered process of drybrush painting weaves an impression of material textures that heightens the genuine veracity of her braided hair, classic Loden coat, and Teutonic coloration. He likely relied on three sable brushes (no. 5, no. 10, and no. 15) and not the flat brushes usually employed in applying washes to carefully work its surface.  As he explained, “I work in drybrush when my emotion gets deep enough into a subject…I dip (the brush) into the watercolor color, play out the brush and bristles, squeeze out a good deal of the moisture and color with my fingers so that there is only a very small amount of paint left…A good drybrush is done over a very wet series of washes….Drybrush is layer upon layer. It’s a definite weaving process–you weave the layers of drybrush over and within the broad washes of watercolor” (John Wilmerding, Andrew Wyeth: The Helga Pictures, New York, 1987, pp. 12-13). Helga and Andrew often walked the hills surrounding Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania. As she recalled, he would often point to this tree or that tree and exclaim, ‘formidable’. It is a word might best describe The Prussian and as well, its companion work, Braids, executed in 1979, the well-known tempera that portrays Helga in a new reckoning as a woman five years older. Well after all the fuss over the unveiling of the Helga paintings, Helga remained close. In a 2007 interview, when he was asked if Helga would be present at his 90th birthday party, he said, “Yeah, certainly…She’s part of the family now. I know it shocks everyone. That’s what I love about it. It shocks them.”

Wyeth’s notoriety was so great, and the discovery of the Helga images so significant, that it was the cover story on both Time and Newsweek in August of 1986. Wyeth’s depictions of Helga remain some of his most important and sought after works.

NEWSWEEK Magazine cover: Andrew Wyeth's 'Helga' | Aug. 18, 1986

NEWSWEEK Magazine cover: Andrew Wyeth's 'Helga' | Aug. 18, 1986

MARKET INSIGHTS

  • Andrew Wyeth’s artist record was set in November 2022 for $23 million with another portrait of Helga.
  • This painting was shown in over 20 museums – Including the National Gallery of Art in Washington D.C.; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Los Angeles County Museum of Art; Fine Arts Museum San Francisco, and the Detroit Institute of Arts.
  • 10 of Andrew Wyeth’s top 25 drybrush sales at auction achieved over the high estimate.
  • Andrew Wyeth’s market has seen a 6.9% compound annual growth rate since 1976.

Top Results at Auction

"Day Dream" (1980) sold for $23,290,000

Tempera on panel, 19 x 27 in., Sold at Christie’s New York: November 2022 © Wyeth Foundation for American Art/ Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY

"Ericksons" (1980) sold for $10,344,000

Tempera on panel, 42 x 38 in., Sold at Christie’s New York: May 2007

"Above the narrows" (1960) sold for $6,915,000

Tempera on panel, 48 x 32 in., Sold at Christie’s New York: December 2009

"Off Shore" (1967) sold for $6,355,000

Tempera on panel, 21 x 51 1/2 in., Sold at Christie’s New York: May 2010

Similar Paintings in Museum Collections

The Museum of Modern Art, New York

“Christina’s World ” (1948), tempera on panel, 32 x 48 in.

Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York

“Grape Wine” (1966), tempera on masonite, 26 x 29 in.

The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston

“Sandspit” (1953), tempera on masonite, 35 x 48 in.

Authentication

Featured in Andrew Wyeth In Retrospect by Patricia Junker on pages 44, 46, 47.

“If you clean it up, get analytical, all the subtle joy and emotion you felt in the first place goes flying out the window.” – Andrew Wyeth

Images: Copyright©PacificSunTradingCompany, Courtesy Frank E. Fowler and Warren Adelson

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ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

The Secret Muse

Helga Testorf opens up about her unique relationship with Wyeth for the first time in Jesse Brass’s moving short documentary.

American Masters: Wyeth

“Wyeth” tells the story of one of America’s most popular, but least understood, artists – Andrew Wyeth.

Andrew Wyeth: Home Places

Current Exhibition of Andrew Wyeth featuring the Pennsylvania work

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