WAYNE THIEBAUD Biography
A painter of pop-art realism combined with a great respect for
traditional methods and subject matter, Wayne Thiebaud is one of the most
prominent of the Bay Area painters in California in the latter part of the 20th
century. His reputation spread far beyond his own state.
In his painting, he focuses on the commonplace in a way that suggests irony and
objective distance from his subjects. He also makes a point of keeping an
independent distance from the New York art scene.
He was born in Mesa, Arizona, in 1920, and during one summer during his high
school years he apprenticed at the Walt Disney Studio and then studied at an Los
Angeles trade school the next summer. He earned a degree from Sacramento State
College in 1941. From 1938 to 1949, he worked as a cartoonist and designer in
California and New York and served as an artist in the United States Army.
In 1950, at the age of thirty, he enrolled in Sacramento State where he earned a
Master's Degree in 1952 and began teaching at Sacramento City College. In 1960,
he became assistant professor at the University of California, Davis, where he
remained through the 1970s and influenced numerous artist students. However, he
did not have much following among Conceptualists because of his adherence to
basically traditional disciplines, emphasis on hard work rather than creativity,
and love of realism.
On a leave of absence, he spent time in New York City where he became friends
with Willem De Kooning and Franz Kline and was much influenced by these
abstractionists as well as Pop Artists Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns.
During this time, he began a series of very small paintings based on images of
food displayed in windows, and he focused on their basic shapes.
Returning to California, he pursued this subject matter and style, isolating
triangles, circles, squares, etc. He also co-founded the Artists Cooperative
gallery, now Artists Contemporary Gallery, and other cooperatives including Pond
Farm, having been exposed to the concept of cooperatives in New York.
In 1960, he had his first one-man shows in San Francisco at the Museum of Art
and New York at the Staempfli and Tanager galleries. These shows received little
notice, but two years later, a 1962 New York Sidney Janis Gallery exhibition
officially launching Pop Art, brought him national recognition although he
disclaimed being anything other than a painter of illusionistic form.
In 1963, he turned increasingly to figure painting, wooden and rigid with each
detail sharply emphasized; in 1967 his work was shown at the Biennale
Internationale
Source: http://www.askart.com