A Crow Flew By

Andrew Wyeth American

Not on view

Wyeth frequently painted acquaintances and friends who lived near his studios in Pennsylvania and Maine. Here, the artist portrayed his neighbor sitting in a shadowy space and leaning forward to catch the light shining through an unseen window. Working from close observation, Wyeth made numerous sketches of the scene before rendering it in a muted palette. The subdued coloration, sparse setting, stiff pose of the aged figure, and dim shadow evoke a sense of destitution or alienation, while the ray of light suggests to a more hopeful outcome. The evocative title of the work adds to its mystery: some have identified the man as the titular crow, with his rigid, talon-like hands and hunched posture.

A Crow Flew By, Andrew Wyeth (American, Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania 1917–2009 Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania), Egg tempera on wood

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