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12

NEWELL CONVERS WYETH

View of a Destroyed Town,WorldWar I

.

Charcoal on cream wove paper, late 1910s. 785x620 mm; 31x24

1

/

2

inches. Signed in

charcoal, lower right recto.

This drawing has been authenticated by the N. C.Wyeth Catalogue Raisonné Project,

Brandywine River Museum, Chadds Ford, October 24, 2001, identification number

NCWS-2641.

Wyeth (1882-1945), who became one of America’s foremost illustrators during the early

1900s, experienced the horrors and devastation of World War I, like many Americans,

through newspaper images and newsreels. He also met a veteran of the American Army, a

machine-gunner named George L. Linder (1889-1960), soon after Linder returned home

as a wounded veteran to West Chester, PA, following the Battle of Château-Thierry in

July 1918. Linder’s recollection of the battle certainly influenced Wyeth; he mentioned

their introduction in a letter that same year and painted a large canvas,

The Americans at

Château-Thierry

, 1918-19, which illustrated the horrors and ferocity of the battle, now in

a private collection, Pennsylvania.

[10,000/15,000]