Christina's World


Christina's World is a 1948 painting by American painter Andrew Wyeth and one of the best-known American paintings of the middle 20th century. It is a tempera work done in a realist style, depicting a woman semi-reclining on the ground in a treeless, mostly tawny field, looking up at a gray house on the horizon; a barn and various other small outbuildings are adjacent to the house. It is owned by the Museum of Modern Art in New York as part of its permanent collection.

Background

The woman in the painting is Anna Christina Olson. She probably suffered from Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease, a genetic polyneuropathy. Wyeth was inspired to create the painting when he saw her crawling across a field while he was watching from a window in the house. He had a summer home in the area and was on friendly terms with Olson, using her and her younger brother as the subjects of paintings from 1940 to 1968. Olson was the inspiration and subject of the painting but she was not the primary model; Wyeth's wife Betsy posed as the torso of the painting. Olson was 55 at the time that Wyeth created the work.
The house depicted in the painting is known as the Olson House in Cushing, Maine and is open to the public, operated by the Farnsworth Art Museum. It is a National Historic Landmark and has been restored to match its appearance in the painting, although Wyeth separated the house from its barn and changed the lay of the land for the painting.

Reception and history

Christina's World was first exhibited at the Macbeth Gallery in Manhattan in 1948. It received little attention from critics at the time, but Alfred Barr, the founding director of the Museum of Modern Art, bought the painting for $1,800. He promoted it at MoMA and it gradually grew in popularity over the years. Today, it is considered an icon of American art and is rarely loaned out by the museum.
It is often perceived as the embodiment of a strong sense of longing.

In popular culture

In Arthur C. Clarke's novel ', Christina's World is one of the two paintings hanging on the living room wall of "an elegant, anonymous hotel suite" to which the astronaut David Bowman is transported after passing through the Star Gate. It does not appear in the directed by Stanley Kubrick.
In issue #28 of Garth Ennis's comics series Preacher, Jesse Custer is sitting in front of the painting in the MoMA, examining it. In issue #43, whose story is titled "Christina's World", Jesse relates his visit to the museum to his mother, Christina L'Angell, who explains to him that when she first discovered the painting in a book, she thought Wyeth had painted her own life. In addition, the cover to issue #43 by artist Glenn Fabry is a variation of Christina's World, with Christina L'Angell in the role of Anna Christina Olson.
The painting is also part of the sci-fi movie Oblivion from 2013, paying homage to the book A Space Odyssey.
The painting is shown and discussed in the American thriller film The In Crowd.
The life of Olson and her encounter with Wyeth is portrayed in the novel A Piece of the World by Christina Baker Kline.
The painting appears in the 2016 British film War on Everyone during a scene where Terry looks at a reproduction hanging on a wall in Jackie's house, and comments: "It's kinda creepy. It's like something bad's gonna happen but there's nothing she can do about it."
A print of the painting was seen periodically in episodes in the last three seasons of the American television series That Girl, a sitcom that aired on ABC from September 8, 1966 to March 19, 1971. It first appeared hung on the wall parallel to the bed in the apartment bedroom of title character Ann Marie, in overall episode number 84, "It’s So Nice to Have a Mouse Around the House", that aired on March 13, 1969. In overall episode number 111, “Easy Faller,” that aired on March 19, 1970, it had been moved to the wall above the headboard of the bed. It stayed there for the remainder of the series.
A scene in the 1994 film Forrest Gump was inspired by the painting. When Jenny returns home she throws herself on the ground, mirroring "Christina's" pose in reverse.
The painting was used as inspiration for the Farmhouse in the 2020 video game The Last of Us Part II, which was developed by ''Naughty Dog
s Reuben Shah in collaboration with John Sweeney.