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Manhattan's art market last week offered little food to such hungry-eyed faddists. Instead, the standout shows pointed up the advantage of hewing to a straight and narrow path. Two young but conservative U.S. painters, Andrew Wyeth and Jack Levine, were staging exhibitions bound to enhance their already strong reputations. They had succeeded not by any violent shift of style but by pressing along their old ways to new heights...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: Breakthroughs | 11/16/1953 | See Source »

...spreading agent" called hyaluronidase, extracted from the testicles of bulls, does a lot to prevent the formation or reformation of kidney stones, reported a group of researchers for Wyeth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Compound Prescription | 6/23/1952 | See Source »

...news about established artists and the new work of contemporary painters, conservative as well as the most radical experimenters. Those of you who have been collecting TIME'S Art color pages now have a gallery of reproductions that includes the work of Toulouse-Lautrec, John Sloan, Andrew Wyeth, El Greco, Vincent Van Gogh, John Marin, Wassily Kandinsky, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, Paul Cezanne, Paolo Veronese and Leonardo da Vinci. In addition, the color pages have provided the opportunity to show a wide range of other art forms: from modern church architecture to flower arrangements, from Indian sand painting...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Jun. 2, 1952 | 6/2/1952 | See Source »

...Atheneum never lost its head over the moderns. It has had a friendly eye for such conservatives as Eakins and Andrew Wyeth, has spent much of recent purchase budgets (currently more than $50,000 a year) to build up its stock of the Renaissance and baroque schools. This year's latest acquisition is The Tiger Hunt by Rubens (1577-1640). And the most popular painting in the whole collection is still a crisply clear, 18th-century portrait of Mrs. Seymour Fort by John Singleton Copley (TIME...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Art: 110 Years in Hartford | 5/19/1952 | See Source »

...York are not without courage," said a New York Herald Tribune review of the show. "One of them, in this day of heavy . . . emphasis on non-objectivism and abstraction, dared to include among his favorite ten, pictures by such substantial, solid realists as Eakins, Homer, Luks, Sloan, Wyeth and Burchfield. That. . . takes rather more audacity than naming . . . fashionably fragmentary abstractions...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Apr. 21, 1952 | 4/21/1952 | See Source »

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