By Leigh Houck, News and Media Relations Intern
There鈥檚 only a week left to see the first exhibition commemorating Wayne Thiebaud鈥檚 century on earth. (Two more exhibitions are planned in the region through 2021.) The John Natsoulas Gallery in downtown Davis is running Wayne Thiebaud Exhibition from Wednesday through Saturday Nov. 30. Thiebaud is a nationally renowned Sacramento artist and professor emeritus of the Art Department at the University of California, Davis. The retrospective exhibition coincides with Thiebaud鈥檚 99th birthday, which was Nov. 15.
The exhibition comprises the entire first floor of the John Natsoulas Gallery. The works are all on paper, but were created using a variety of different media: from blue felt pen on paper, oil on canvas, and lithographs, to HardPoint and Drypoint Etching, serigraph color woodcut, direct gravure with Aquatint, and more.
Thiebaud at a Glance
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Food and landscapes highlight his popular work
Many pieces in this exhibition fall in two main themes: still lifes of food, and landscapes. The food ranges from sweet 鈥淐upcakes鈥 dripping with frosting to savory 鈥淢eat Counter.鈥 Landscapes include cityscapes depicting urban life from afar, using a zoomed-out or bird鈥檚 eye view. The large oil on canvas painting 鈥淧alm Street鈥 greets visitors walking into the main gallery. Colorful buildings and long shadows meet in an unexpected and funky perspective: cars look like they might fall off a steeply sloping road. Other landscapes like 鈥淩eservoir鈥 and 鈥淣ight Landscape鈥 feature floodplains and fields reminiscent of Sacramento鈥檚 natural spaces.
However, there are some outliers whose subjects fall outside these two themes. In the entrance hallway, the right wall features 鈥淪even Dogs鈥 frolicking on a spacious, blank background. Once in the main room, a lithograph of a clown hangs on the left wall, and a lithograph of a bird hangs on the right. An array of gaily patterned bow ties hang perpendicular.
The works on display span over 70 years. In his early life, Thiebaud was a cartoonist, even working as an animator for Disney. 鈥淛o鈥, a 1939 ink-on-paper piece, is distinctively stylized as Disney. The most recent piece in the exhibition, 76 years after the oldest piece, is 鈥淐ounter Woman鈥 from 2015.
Eagle-eyed visitors will observe several patterns in the lifetime of pieces. His earlier works are colorful and bright, while more recent works are often rendered in black and white. 鈥淭oy Counter鈥, a linoleum cut print from 1970, is full of bold, Pixar-reminiscent colors. 鈥淐ounter Woman鈥 (2015) is entirely in black and white. Common to almost every piece? A distinct use of shadow, rendered in scribbled pen, crosshatch engraving, or swathes of paint.
Entering and leaving, guests will pass through a hallway of Wayne Thiebaud memorabilia. The gallery offers a variety of souvenirs for Thiebaud fans to purchase. The selection includes calendars, cards, and coffee-table books adorned with the artist鈥檚 most recognizable and colorful pieces.
For visitors looking for a memento larger than a bookmark, a selection of the pieces in the exhibition are for sale. Prices range from $400 for a Giclee print of 鈥淔our Cupcakes鈥 to $23,000 for 鈥淒esserts,鈥 an original 1966 hard point and drypoint etching.
So go feast your eyes on 鈥淐upcakes鈥 and 鈥淒ark Chocolate.鈥 The exhibition represents a lifetime of work. On one piece, Thiebaud鈥檚 signature is accompanied with a heart. You鈥檒l have to go to the exhibition to find it for yourself.
If you don't catch this gallery exhibition, you will have to travel to Sacramento for the Crocker Art Museum's own celebration of the artist in 2020 or wait until 2021 to enjoy 嘿嘿视频 Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum's exhibition, which will examine his influence on a new generation of artists.
John Natsoulas Gallery hours .
Learn more about the exhibition and Thiebaud .