Age, Biography and Wiki

John Wesley (artist) (John Mercer Wesley) was born on 25 November, 1928 in Los Angeles, California, U.S.. Discover John Wesley (artist)'s Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is He in this year and how He spends money? Also learn how He earned most of networth at the age of 94 years old?

Popular As John Mercer Wesley
Occupation N/A
Age 93 years old
Zodiac Sign Sagittarius
Born 25 November, 1928
Birthday 25 November
Birthplace Los Angeles, California, U.S.
Date of death February 10, 2022
Died Place New York City, New York, U.S.
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 25 November. He is a member of famous with the age 93 years old group.

John Wesley (artist) Height, Weight & Measurements

At 93 years old, John Wesley (artist) height not available right now. We will update John Wesley (artist)'s Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
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Who Is John Wesley (artist)'s Wife?

His wife is Alice Richter (m. 1947-1959) Jo Baer (m. 1959-1970) Hannah Green (m. 1971-1996)

Family
Parents Not Available
Wife Alice Richter (m. 1947-1959) Jo Baer (m. 1959-1970) Hannah Green (m. 1971-1996)
Sibling Not Available
Children 2

John Wesley (artist) Net Worth

His net worth has been growing significantly in 2022-2023. So, how much is John Wesley (artist) worth at the age of 93 years old? John Wesley (artist)’s income source is mostly from being a successful . He is from United States. We have estimated John Wesley (artist)'s net worth , money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2023 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2023 Under Review
Net Worth in 2022 Pending
Salary in 2022 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income

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Timeline

2022

Wesley died at his home in Manhattan, on February 10, 2022, at the age of 93.

1980

Throughout the latter half of his career, Wesley continued to refine his approach, balancing concision and directness with emotional complexity and offbeat subject matter. His work in the 1980s often foregrounded formal concerns through frieze-like arrays of repeated nudes (e.g., Hips, 1984) or animals in decorative, wallpaper-like arrangements (e.g. Untitled (Horse and Clouds), 1988). A series in the 1990s employed nude women—often radically cropped with their faces out of view or eyes closed—variously cooing down at viewers (as if seen from a suckling infant's perspective), floating as enveloping, oceanic bodies, or lying prone and vulnerable in the throes of ecstasy. Jenifer Borum described these later paintings as conflating "the maternal and the erotic, effectively underscoring the infantile nature of the media’s obsessional fragmentation and objectification of women." Unlike the ads, she noted, "For Wesley, the personal and the social are inseparable." David Pagel identified a new level of tenderness and vulnerability in Wesley's large acrylics of the 2000s. Dominated by expanses of flesh against blue sky, works such as Smooch (2003) depicted men and women in tight close-ups of heads, necks, shoulders and hands and seemed to suggest intense moments, memories or daydreams of intimacy.

1976

Wesley's work has been exhibited at the Whitney Museum of American Art, MoMA PS1, Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam, Portikus (Frankfurt), and the Chinati Foundation, among others. It belongs to public art collections including the Museum of Modern Art, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and Whitney Museum. In 1976, he was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.

He was recognized with a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1976, and awards from the National Endowment for the Arts and American Academy of Arts and Letters, among others.

1973

Around 1973, Wesley began a long engagement (extending into the 2000s) with popular 1950s characters from comic strips such as Blondie, Popeye and Dennis the Menace. A particular preoccupation was the cowlicked, Chic Young character Dagwood Bumstead, from Blondie, who critics such as Linda Norden wrote, functioned as a stand-in for Wesley’s missing father, allowing him to access the people, domestic spaces and pathos of his childhood. He placed these comics characters in ambiguous, often-primal and darkly humorous scenarios through which he explored eroticism, frustration, terror, despair or violence within mundane, everyday life.

Representative early comics-based works included Olive Oyl (1973), which presented that character nude, slumbering and floating with four angry, pointing infant Swee'Pea characters straddling her; Popeye (1973), a gun-wielding boy kidnapping a helpless Wimpy; and The Bumsteads (1974), which depicted Blondie sprawled across a bed, face-down and crying, bent-legged and bottomless, her foot partially covering Dagwood's face, as he leaned over from behind, his next move unclear. Wesley's later "Bumstead" paintings "fixed on the neurotic, erotically inclined psyche of the American male," examining themes of insatiable desire and frustration, inadequacy and mediocrity, rage, longing and loss. He reversed conventional gender roles in paintings like Off His Feed (1991), portraying a nude, possibly impotent Dagwood lying passive while an attentive Blondie tickled his toes; in Bumstead, Maddened by the Mistral, Fighting for His Knife (1990), two Dagwoods struggled over a murder weapon, while in Bumstead in Bedlam (1991) Wesley's Dagwood appeared in a straitjacket. In the 2000s, he added a new twist to the Dagwood works, incorporating a female character that paid homage to the Japanese ukiyo-e genre and eighteenth-century master, Kitagawa Utamaro, in paintings that explored shared erotic preoccupations, such as Utamaro Nude, Bumstead Nude and Utamaro Washing, Bumstead Sleeping (both 2003).

1970

In the 1970s, Wesley began to turn toward domestic scenarios that David Pagel later described as "loving dissections of ambiguity and double meaning." In formal terms, these paintings were characterized by a freer use of line, more open compositions, and intensified color palettes dominated by candy pinks, baby blues, flesh beiges and hospital greens; thematically, they often took a farcical, yet incisive look at gender relations, paternal power and mortality. Suzanna and the Lugosis (May I Cut In?) (1972) portrayed a pale, languishing woman in the arms of a tuxedoed, pink vampire, with three identical but paler vampires lining up behind him. In Daddy’s Home (1972), Wesley duplicated a gleeful daughter figure five times, the repetition transforming an expression of uncontrollable delight into one that seemed to suggest a demonic grimace and dependence as a weapon. Peter Schjeldahl wrote that this work signaled "a sharp, decidedly eccentric angle of vision" situated "more or less queasily, at some point on the continuum from funny‐ha‐ha to funny‐peculiar."

1963

Wesley's visual fixations and style registered their strange, idiosyncratic qualities as early as 1963. He placed cartoonish, expressively posed group and individual portraits and historical figures in vacant spaces, framed by symmetrical, Art Nouveau-like borders of flowers, birds or—in The Aviator’s Daughters (1963)—silhouetted World War I biplanes, creating a counterpoint of masculine and feminine. In the middle of the decade, this imagery gave way to unsettling erotic paintings of nude and semi-clothed figures (often seemingly oblivious women) and personified animals—frogs, camels, bears, apes, birds, squirrels—some arranged in repetitive frieze-like formations with flat-painted borders. Among these works were: Dream of Frogs (1965), featuring a languorous nude female reclining above three laughing pink frogs; Camel (1966), a horse-headed man and double-humped camel aggressively coupled; and "Gluttony" (1969), which depicted five shapely legs protruding from the bill of a Donald Duck-like character.

1959

Wesley's early exhibition history included group shows at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (1959); Oakland Art Museum (1963); three American Federation of the Arts international traveling shows (1966–8); the 1968–9 Whitney Painting Annual (precursor to its biennial); Documenta 5 (1972); and solo shows at Robert Elkon Gallery (1963–84). In his later career, surveys of Wesley's work were held at the Stedelijk Museum (1993, travelling to Portikus); MoMA PS1 (2000, organized by Alanna Heiss); the Harvard Art Museums (Sert Gallery, 2001, organized by Linda Norden); Chinati Foundation (2004); Kunsthalle Nürnberg (2006); Fondazione Prada (2009); and in several exhibitions at Fredericks & Freiser in New York. The Prada show was curated by Germano Celant as part of the Venice Biennale and featured 150 works.

1953

Over the next decade, two jobs directly influenced his early painting. In 1953, he began a five-year employment in the illustration department at Northrop Aircraft Corporation, where he simplified blueprints into drawings; in 1960, he moved to New York with his second wife, the minimalist painter Jo Baer, and took a job as a postal clerk. Drawing on both experiences, he incorporated simple, functional line, matte cyanotype-blue color and iconic postal forms (shields, stamps, seals) in banner- and plaque-like paintings influenced by the deadpan imagery of Jasper Johns and related to work by Pop artists Roy Lichtenstein, James Rosenquist and Andy Warhol. During this period Wesley developed close closest personal affiliations with minimalist artists Donald Judd, Dan Flavin, Robert Ryman and Sol Lewitt. Despite outward disparities in their approaches, Judd and Flavin were longtime supporters of Wesley's work; Judd reserved permanent space for Wesley’s paintings alongside well-known minimalist works at his Chinati Foundation complex in Marfa, Texas.

1947

Wesley married his first wife, Alice Richter, in 1947. They had two children, a daughter, Christine Knox, and a son, Ner Wesley. After their divorce, he married the minimalist painter Jo Baer in 1959 and moved with her from Los Angeles to New York. In 1970, they divorced and in 1971 he married the novelist Hannah Green,remaining with her until her death in 1996. The playwright and painter Patricia Broderick, who died in 2003, was his partner for the last six years of her life.

1928

John Wesley (November 25, 1928 – February 10, 2022) was an American painter, known for idiosyncratic figurative works of eros and humor, rendered in a precise, hard-edged, deadpan style. Wesley's art largely remained true to artistic premises that he established in the 1960s: a comic-strip style of flat shapes, delicate black outline, a limited matte palette of saturated colors, and elegant, pared-down compositions. His characteristic subjects included cavorting nymphs, nudes, infants and animals, pastoral and historical scenes, and 1950s comic strip characters in humorously blasphemous, ambiguous scenarios of forbidden desire, rage or despair.

John Mercer Wesley was born in Los Angeles, California in 1928, to Elsa Marie Patzwaldt and Ner Wesley. In 1934, he discovered his father at home, dead of a stroke—an event that had a profoundly traumatic, long-term impact on him. Afterwards, he lived in an orphanage for a year, until his mother remarried and assumed custody. He began to make abstract expressionist paintings in the early 1950s despite a lack of any formal art training, eventually taking evening art classes while working blue-collar jobs as a dishwasher, warehouse stocker and aircraft riveter.