CHADDS FORD, PA.- The Brandywine River Museum of Art announced today the appointment of William L. Coleman, Ph.D. as the Wyeth Foundation Curator of the Andrew and Betsy Wyeth Collection and Director of the Andrew and Betsy Wyeth Study Center. Coleman, an experienced curator, art historian and teacher, will assume this newly created senior position at the Brandywine on October 17. Funded by the Wyeth Foundation for American Art, this role emerged from an innovative collections-sharing partnership between the Brandywine, the Farnsworth Art Museum and the Wyeth Foundationwhich was announced earlier this spring.
We are thrilled to welcome William to this new position, said Thomas Padon, the James H. Duff Director of the Brandywine River Museum of Art. His appointment is key to activating Betsy Wyeth's estate plan in which her remarkable collection of Andrew Wyeth's works would be accessible to the public and future generations of scholars in perpetuity. Williams in-depth knowledge of and experience in the field of American art make him the ideal person to bring fresh perspectives to Wyeth's seven-decade career through exhibitions, long-term loans, public programs and publications."
In his new role as the Wyeth Foundation Curator, Coleman will be responsible for stewarding the Andrew and Betsy Wyeth Collection, located jointly at the Brandywine in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania and at the Farnsworth Art Museum in Rockland, Mainethe two geographic regions where Andrew Wyeth lived and painted. Managed by Coleman under the auspices of the Brandywine, the collection is comprised of nearly 7,000 works from across Wyeths seven decades as a working artist, including rarely seen paintings, watercolors, sketches and sketchbooks. Based in Chadds Ford on the Brandywines campus, Coleman will work in both Pennsylvania and Maine and be supported by a staff of three full-time employees. Together they will plan and develop exhibitions, make works available for loan to other institutions, and foster new research and scholarship on the life and work of Andrew Wyethincluding producing the catalogue raisonné of the artist. Coleman will also be responsible for curating compelling displays of a broad range of Andrew Wyeths works for both the Brandywines and Farnsworths dedicated Wyeth galleries throughout the year.
The collaborative artistic practice of Andrew and Betsy Wyeth has been a lodestar throughout my life so it's a thrill and an honor to be entrusted with the stewardship of their creative legacy in this unique new role, said Coleman. I see Andrew Wyeth's work as an essential manifestation of many divergent strains in the history of American art. Through the astonishing holdings of the Andrew and Betsy Wyeth Collection, we'll be able to draw out these associations and dialogues as never before.
Coleman comes to the Brandywine from The Olana Partnership, Hudson, NY, where he served as the Director of Collections & Exhibitions. Since 2019, Coleman has overseen the organizations 90,000-item collection/archive, as well as the traveling loan exhibitions program of the artist Frederic Edwin Churchs 250-acre estatea New York State Historic Site and National Historic Landmark. Coleman has particular expertise in nineteenth-century American landscape painting and has published a variety of related scholarship on the subject, as well as on architecture and music.
My own diverse path in curatorial work, research, and teaching on historic and contemporary American art, including the challenges and opportunities of single-artist legacy collections, has given me a unique perspective on this powerful body of work that I greatly look forward to sharing with the Brandywine and Farnsworth audiences, added Coleman. On a personal level, I am excited to be based at Brandywines Chadds Ford campus. Some of my very earliest museum memories are of visits to the Brandywine while growing up in metro Philadelphia, so this will be a most welcome homecoming to an institution I love already. It will be a great pleasure to work with others who believe in the missions of the Brandywine and the Farnsworth as I do and to share my passion for American art and the Wyeths.
Prior to The Olana Partnership, Coleman was Associate Curator of American Art at the Newark Museum of Art in New Jersey, where he was responsible for the institutions world-class collection of nineteenth-century paintings, as well as major exhibitions and publications. He previously held teaching posts at Washington University in St. Louis and at University of California, Berkeleywhere he earned his Ph.D. in history of art in 2015. Coleman also holds a M.St. in musicology from the University of Oxford, England; an M.A. in history of art from Courtauld Institute of Art, London, England; and a B.A. in history of art from Haverford College, Pennsylvania. He has been awarded fellowships with the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and Winterthur Museum, Garden & Library.
In his role as the Wyeth Curator, Coleman will be instrumental in advancing the study of Andrew Wyeth and those around him, especially his wife, Betsy James Wyethwhose research, publications, record-keeping, preservation of properties, and homemaking played a large role in shaping this iconic artists career. Assembled primarily by Betsy, the Foundations collection is deeply personal and gives significant insight into Wyeths artistic and career trajectory.
Both the Brandywine and Farnsworth museums have longstanding relationships with the Wyeth family. Located in Chadds Ford, Pennsylvania, the Brandywine is focused on American art, and has generated some of the most well-received exhibitions and scholarship on three generations of Wyeth family artists. In 2017, the Brandywines Andrew Wyeth: In Retrospect exhibition presented more than 100 of the artists most important paintings and works on paper, along with a catalogue publishing new perspectives on his work and career. The Farnsworth, in Rockland, Maine, is also recognized for its close connections with and exhibitions of works by the Wyeth family. The artist spent his summers living and working in midcoastal Maine. Its recent exhibition Andrew Wyeth: Maine Legacy highlighted the artists connections to the area. In both Pennsylvania and Maine, Wyeth was engaged by the landscapes and the people living there, finding inspiration for works that at once capture the majesty of nature and the everyday lives of the artists and their subjects.