Jan 292026
 

“Boys Planting”, 2021, Oil on canvas

“The Last Night”, 2020, Oil and acrylic on canvas

“Quiero Amor”, 2019, Oil on canvas

“Nous Visited The Seine, But Did Not Swim”, 2022, Oil on canvas

“The Senses”, 2021, Oil and oil stick on canvas

The paintings in Jerrell Gibbs‘s solo exhibition at Brandywine Museum of Art, No Solace in the Shade, are alive with colors and movement, capturing moments in time both real and imagined.

From the museum about the show-

“Jerrell Gibbs: No Solace in the Shade” surveys the first decade of contemporary Baltimore artist Jerrell Gibbs’s (b. 1988) career and marks his first one-person Museum exhibition. A painter with astonishing creativity, Gibbs’s dynamic, large-scale figurative paintings explore facets of Black life, including family, friends, and community. His highly personal approach creates a narrative that centers everyday moments in Black life, representations of which have been excluded from art history until recent decades. Throughout his body of work, Gibbs transforms scenes of ordinary life into monumental moments while exploring themes of identity, reflection, and belonging.

Across his career, Gibbs has challenged the near invisibility of Black life in American art. He does so by celebrating identity and culture with profound compassion and insight, often weaving in elements of his own upbringing. Several works featured in the exhibition represent people from his own life. Old family photographs are also an inspiration in his creative process, prompting Gibbs to explore questions of identity and the passage of time. Gibbs conveys the joy, liveliness, and contemplation of Black life in positive representations. Shifting away from menacing racial stereotypes present in previous depictions of Black life in art (particularly images of Black men), Gibbs’ paintings show Black people living, not just surviving.

This exhibition closes 3/1/26.

Jan 292026
 

Chopping Ice from the Water Trough, 1935, an oil painting by artist Dale Nichols, is part of Brandywine Museum of Art‘s permanent collection.

From the museum about the work-

Rising to popularity during the Great Depression, a style known as American Regionalism brought modern stylization to images of rural life. In his landscape painting Chopping Ice from the Water Trough, Dale Nichols engages Regionalism by bringing a clean, minimal approach to his representation of daily farm chores by highlighting the smooth contours of the snowy slopes and the sharp-edged geometry of the barn. Nichols, a native of Nebraska, trained and taught for many years at the Art Institute of Chicago but returned throughout his career to the farm subjects most familiar to him from his childhood. His work was so attuned to farm life that International Harvester Company commissioned him to depict a series of works marking the development and use of the famous McCormick Reaper in agriculture.

Nov 182025
 

Jasper Frances Cropsey, “Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway”,1873, Oil on canvas

Jasper Francis Cropsey, “Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway”,1873 (closer)

Andrew Wyeth “Fall at Archies”, 1937, Egg tempera on panel

Andrew Wyeth “Fall at Archies”, 1937,(detail)

Jasper Francis Cropsey, “Autumn on the Brandywine”, 1887, Oil on canvas

Autumn is a perfect time to see the latest exhibition Cropsey, Wyeth, and the American Landscape Tradition at the Brandywine Museum of Art. The exhibition offers the first opportunity to view the large painting Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway by Jasper Francis Cropsey in a museum, as well as to see several additional works by artists including the always wonderful Andrew Wyeth.

From the museum about the exhibition-

A stunning example of Gilded Age patronage, Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway of 1873, has been in private British collections since it was commissioned the same year by Irish-American railroad magnate James McHenry. This major canvas changes our understanding of Jasper Francis Cropsey, one of the iconic talents of American art. Almost seven feet in length, Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway is both a celebration of the American landscape and American industry. The train passing through the valley is a reference to the Erie Railroad, in which McHenry had recently acquired a majority stake. Just after it was completed, McHenry had the painting shipped to England where it remained until purchased in 2025 by the The J. Jeffrey and Ann Marie Fox Foundation for American Art. Seen by the public for the first time since 1873, the painting will be at the heart of a special exhibition, Cropsey, Wyeth, and the American Landscape Tradition, which draws on the rich and varied holdings of the Brandywine Museum of Art and the Wyeth Foundation for American Art to provide a focused appraisal of the complex art of American landscape painting.

Alongside this exceptional large-format Cropsey, additional works by Cropsey, Alfred Thompson Bricher, Albert Bierstadt, William Trost Richards, John Frederick Kensett, Mary Blood Mellen, Martin Johnson Heade, and more survey the nineteenth-century boom in landscape painting in the United States and the relationship to industry that was a key context at the heart of this movement. The exhibition continues the story with Cropsey’s afterlives. Through key works in the Brandywine and Wyeth Foundation collections, a clear line of descent traces the further development of American landscape art, via Homer, Bellows, and N.C. Wyeth to an especially rich flowering in the works of Andrew Wyeth (1917–2009). Documentation in the Wyeth family library and archives shows a depth of engagement with artists of the Hudson River School not previously recognized, including specific lessons in composition, allegory, and the aesthetic potential of industry that Andrew Wyeth learned from paintings like Autumn in the Ramapo Valley. With a variety of works in watercolor and tempera, some of which have never been exhibited before, the story of the rich American landscape tradition continues and intriguing commonalities between the artists of the Hudson River School and Wyeth emerge.

Some additional information about Cropsey from the museum-

Cropsey was one of the leading lights of American art in the third quarter of the nineteenth century: a period in which new fortunes from natural resources and transportation were being spent on ambitious landscape paintings depicting the very regions that were the sources of their wealth. Cropsey’s rivals included the likes of Frederic Edwin Church and Albert Bierstadt. All three worked regularly for railroad barons, and all three achieved notable success, while the so-called “landscape boom” lasted, that allowed them to build statement mansions in New York’s countryside.

It was at Cropsey’s country home, “Aladdin,” in Warwick, New York that he made this painting for the transatlantic businessman James McHenry. Irish-born, Philadelphia-raised, Liverpool-launched, and London-based by this time, McHenry was a European supplier for, and investor in, American railroads. By this date, he had taken control of the Erie Railway and, in celebration, commissioned a depiction from Cropsey of its passage through the scenery of the Ramapo Valley near the northeastern border of New Jersey with New York. Cropsey had already gained a national reputation for paintings that blend industrial and natural subjects in this way, most famously in his 1865 painting Starrucca Viaduct, Pennsylvania (Toledo Museum of Art) depicting a major engineering feat of the same railroad McHenry now controlled, so he was a fitting choice for this commission.

While many American landscape artists were traveling and painting internationally in the period, interest in their work generally came from American audiences. Cropsey was an exception: he worked in London for seven years and exhibited thirteen paintings at the Royal Academy of Art’s competitive annual exhibitions, was presented to Queen Victoria, and sold numerous works to British buyers. The return of Autumn in the Ramapo Valley, Erie Railway to the United States is a landmark moment for scholars and art lovers alike that helps in telling a fuller story of the global networks that surround historical American art.

This exhibition closes 5/31/26.

Jun 132025
 

“Adam”, 1963, Tempera on panel

“Adam”, 1963, Tempera on panel (detail)

The Brandywine Museum of Art is currently showing Human Nature, a selection of work by Andrew Wyeth focused on the human form. The museum has an extensive collection of the artist’s paintings and often has shows focused on him and his artistic family.

From the museum about this exhibition-

One of the artist Andrew Wyeth’s enduring legacies is his highly original response to the subject of the human body. Alongside his iconic landscapes and visionary responses to buildings, botany, and beyond, his figure paintings and drawings offer particular insight into how this unique creative journey took shape, and how he was connected to the history of art.

The rarely seen paintings and drawings on view in Human Nature reveal an artist who was steeped in the tradition of Western art, engaged in a diligent study of the human form via the long-tested methods of sketching from live models and plaster casts, and who found in his portrait subjects ways of evoking enigmatic narratives and inner lives.

The works in this exhibition, drawn from the Brandywine and Wyeth Foundation collections as well as one exciting loan from a private collection, present a unique opportunity to understand Wyeth’s eye. Case studies include early figure drawings made in his father’s studio, self-portraits, intimate depictions of close family members, a little known and fascinating body of commissioned portraits, a broad representation of his mature practice including many major figural temperas and watercolors, and a final section on how he approached the nude figure. One highlight is the loan of Wyeth’s portrait of Professor Joyce Hill Stoner, a leading art conservator who shares in the exhibition’s wall texts some firsthand reflection on the process of being painted by Wyeth. Visitors will come away with new understanding of a remarkable lifelong practice that clarifies the operations and values at work across his art.

The painting above is of Adam Johnson who raised chickens and pigs a short walk from Wyeth’s studio in Chadds Ford. When this was painted, Wyeth had already known him for thirty years. Other interesting paintings in the show include the two very different portraits of Wyeth’s sister Ann, from earlier in his career, pictured below.

“Ann Wyeth in White”, 1936, Oil on canvas

“Ann”, 1939, Egg tempera on panel

From the museum about these two works-

As a young artist, Wyeth made a few dozen works in oil on canvas before abandoning this medium for good. There is a stark difference between the two portraits of pianist and composer Ann Wyeth, the artist’s sister, made three years apart. This depiction is handled very freely, in contrast to the more tightly painted tempera to the right, in which the artist and, by extension, the viewer loom over the subject in a most unsettling way while Ann Wyeth ignores our gaze in her peripheral vision.

This exhibition closes 6/15/25. A new exhibition of Wyeth works, Andrew Wyeth at Kuerner Farm: The Eye of the Earth, will open on 6/22.

Jan 172025
 

Flat Top Desk, 1929 and 1962, Walnut and padauk, Flat Top Desk Chair, 1929, Walnut, padauk and laced leather seat, Flat Top Desk Figure, 1929, Bronze cast of cocobolo original

“Head of Dreiser”, ca.1927, Pine- This is a portrait of writer Theodore Dreiser who Esherick met in 1924 through the Hedgerow Theatre. This was a rough, geometric sketch for a finished mahogany piece.

“Self Portrait”, 1919, Oil on canvas

The Crafted World of Wharton Esherick, on view at Brandywine Museum of Art, presents a wonderful look at the artist’s varied work from throughout his career.

From the museum-

This exhibition explores the interdisciplinary creativity of Wharton Esherick (1887-1970), the famed American artist best known as the father of the Studio Furniture Movement.

Esherick considered his hillside home and studio, now the Wharton Esherick Museum (WEM), the best representation of his iconoclastic vision, calling it “an autobiography in three dimensions.” Built between 1926 and 1966, his unconventional escape on the verdant slopes of Valley Forge Mountain houses almost 3000 iconic works of art from across Esherick’s seven decades of artistic practice.

The Crafted World brings selections from this rich and rarely loaned collection to a broader public, including many objects never before seen except in Esherick’s home and studio. Detailing the artist’s career from his early woodcut illustrations for books by members of the avant-garde literati to his revolutionary reimagining of furniture forms as organic sculpture, works will be presented in thematic vignettes that invite visitors into Esherick’s story and bring the essence of his creative world into the gallery.

Below are a few more selections.

“Drop Leaf Desk”, 1927

“Hedgerow Theatre Lobby Stair Model”, 1934, Walnut; “Spiral Staircase Model”, 1963,Pine; “Bok House Chimney Stair Model”, 1937

From the museum about the staircase models above-

Esherick made numerous objects centering on the twist or spiral to represent natural growth. He returned to this form in models for staircase commissions for the Bok House- in which the spiral is created through gradual shifts in the shape and width of each step- and for the Hedgerow Theatre– which features a staircase like the Studio’s that revolves around a center post.

“Moonlight on Alabama Pines”,1919-20, Oil on canvas, carved wood frame with metallic paint

Alabama Pine woodblock, 1929

“Oblivion” 1934, Walnut

About the sculpture above, Oblivion, from the museum-

Moved by the emotion and physicality of actors, Esherick spent many hours in the balcony of the Hedgerow Theatre, in nearby Rose Valley, sketching performers, and many more hours designing stage sets, props, posters, and other visual elements for their productions. Oblivion was inspired by the passionate embrace of two actors in The Son of Perdition, a play by Lynn Riggs. This organic, fluid sculpture offers an exaggerated rendering of emotion as two intertwined bodies, carved from a single log, seem to softly dissolve into one another. Oblivion was prominently featured in the sculpture portion of the second Whitney Biennial in 1936.

This exhibition closes Sunday, 1/19/25.

Oct 312024
 

The painting above is Norman Rockwell’s The Fiddler, 1921, currently on view at Brandywine Museum of Art in Pennsylvania.

From the museum about the work-

Best known for the paintings he did as cover illustrations for The Saturday Evening Post, Rockwell also did extensive work for other major publications. “The Fiddler” appeared as a cover for The Country Gentleman in October 1921, still relatively early in his career. Rockwell celebrates autumn and Halloween, represented by both the grinning jack-o-lantern and the corn cob and autumn leaf garland. He skillfully mimics the effect of stage lighting in this painting, highlighting the musician’s expression and hands, creating an illusion of three-dimensionality.