The Popular Magazine, cover illustration

Artist:

N.C. Wyeth

(American, 1882 - 1945)

The Popular Magazine, cover illustration

Alternate Title(s):The Skier; The Ski Runner; The Ski-runner
Medium: Oil on canvas
Date: 1910
Dimensions:
41 3/8 × 27 1/8 in. (105.1 × 68.9 cm)
Private collection
Accession number: SUPP2000.242
Research Number: NCW: 242
InscribedLower right: N. C. WYETH (underlined) / -10; on reverse: THE SKI RUNNER / COPYRIGHTED
ProvenanceThe artist; Mrs. N. C. Wyeth (and with Knoedler Galleries, New York, NY, by 1956, # 54801); Carolyn Wyeth to 1990; Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Valloti to 1998; Collection of Jim and Jocelyn Stewart, to 2014; (New York, NY, Sotheby's, Nov. 20, 2014, lot no. 5);
Exhibition HistoryBoston, MA, 1912, no. 7 as "The Ski-runner"; New York, NY, 1957, cat. no. 46 as "The Ski Runner"; Southampton, NY, 1966, no numbers; Greenville, SC, 1974, no. 46, as "The Skier"; Chadds Ford, PA, 1975
References Douglas Allen and Douglas Allen, Jr., N. C. Wyeth, The Collected Paintings, Illustrations and Murals (New York: Crown Publishers, Inc., 1972), p. 269; Christine B. Podmaniczky, N. C. Wyeth, A Catalogue Raisonné of Paintings (London: Scala, 2008), I.302, p. 211
Curatorial RemarksThis painting was done during a visit by Stimson Wyeth, who posed for photographs that the artist then used to draw the figure. (unpublished letter NCW to Carolyn Bockius Wyeth, dated variously 8/11 or 8/13/1910). "I have just completed, and shipped, on the same train with Babe," he wrote, "a cover for the Popular. The most striking and strongest I have done in a long time. 'The Ski Runner' is its title."
The painting seems to be very similar to another painting connected with Street & Smith and now destroyed. In 1988, a daughter of Henry H. Ralston, Vice President in Charge of Publications at Street & Smith, wrote to James B. Wyeth about a painting by N. C. Wyeth with which she had grown up; "We also had at one time "The Ski Jumper"--a picture of a young man with a long tassel-cap streaming out behind going off a hill-top. He was standing straight-up, arms down at his sides, and wearing old-fashioned wide skiis. Unfortunately, it was destroyed in a fire about 15 years ago." As of 2003, there is no published image to associate with this painting.
Image Source for printed Catalogue Raisonne:Transparency directly from painting
Photo Credit:Rick Echelmeyer, 12/2002