News

Mr. Thiebaud’s rich and luminous depictions of midcentury Americana separated him from the classic Pop Art of the time. By Michael Kimmelman Wayne Thiebaud, the California-based painter whose ...
In one of Wayne Thiebaud’s final interviews, the famously upbeat, self-deprecating artist reflected on seven decades of refining his technique as a painter and yet still feeling like a student ...
Wayne Thiebaud speaks onstage at the Leonardo DiCaprio Foundation Gala at Jackson Park Ranch on September 15, 2018 in Santa Rosa, Calif. Thiebaud died Saturday at the age of 101.
Two parallel exhibitions at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art celebrate the painter by showcasing his work and selections of other artists’ work that he made from SFMoMA’s collection.
The paintings of Wayne Thiebaud — the slices of pie, slabs of cake and sloppy spheres of ice cream — are almost shamefully tactile. You want to touch them, run your fingers across the gooey ...
Sacramento artist Wayne Thiebaud turns 100 this month. A new exhibition at Crocker Art Museum spanning his life’s work bears witness to his enduring popularity.
Wayne Thiebaud, whose luscious, colorful paintings of cakes and San Francisco cityscapes combined sensuousness, nostalgia and a hint of melancholy, died on Dec. 25.
The Jan Shrem and Maria Manetti Shrem Museum of Art announced a number of public programs to be held in conjunction with the Wayne Thiebaud: 1958-1968 and ¿¡Welcome?! exhibitions. See separate story ...
Artist Wayne Thiebaud, whose paintings breathed color into the everyday symbols of post-war America, has died age 101, according to a statement from the University of California, Davis, where he ...
Back in the early '60s, Wayne Thiebaud was painting scenes of California cornucopia -- cream cakes, pies, candy apples -- in a luscious, Pop Art, eat-me-now style. His thick, saturated brushstrokes ...