Wayne Thiebaud (born November 15, 1920, Mesa, Arizona, U.S.—died December 25, 2021, Sacramento, California) was an American painter and printmaker who was perhaps best known for his thickly painted American still lifes of such items as foods and cosmetics. He is often incorrectly associated with American Pop art because of his many images of banal objects. However, unlike Pop artists such as Andy Warhol and James Rosenquist, Thiebaud worked from life, not from media images, and his engagement was evident in his loose brushstroke, whereas a hard-edge painting style, signifying mechanical reproduction, was preferred by many Pop artists. Thiebaud’s paintings of consumer goods, portraits of friends and associates, landscapes near his northern California home, and vertiginous San Francisco cityscapes are richly painted and designed to call attention to form.
Thiebaud grew up in a Mormon home in California. He studied commercial art at Long Beach Polytechnic High School and at the Frank Wiggins Trade School (1938; now Los Angeles Trade-Technical College) in Los Angeles and worked as a summer apprentice in the animation department at Walt Disney Studios. From 1939 to 1949 Thiebaud worked as a cartoonist, a sign painter, and an illustrator. He attended San Jose State College (1949–50; now San José State University) and Sacramento State College (B.A., 1951; M.A., 1953; now California State University, Sacramento). By the late 1940s he had given up commercial work. He came under the influence of the Abstract Expressionists and the Bay Area figurative movement. By the ’50s he was employing the thick gestural brushstroke of a Willem de Kooning or a David Park, at the service of the everyday: pinball machines, boys on the beach, bakery counters, cosmetics—he rendered them all in bright colours and strong light within severely ordered compositions. In the following decade Thiebaud turned to landscapes, pushing them toward abstraction by using extremely high horizon lines and unusual points of view. The perspective of his San Francisco cityscapes of the 1980s and ’90s was dramatically angled upward so as to read almost like a flat arrangement of colour and form.
Thiebaud taught art from 1951 to 1960 at Sacramento Junior College (now Sacramento City College) and from 1960 to 1976 at the University of California, Davis. He was active in theatre design work (beginning with The Heiress in 1950) and created public murals and sculptures, and in 1954 he established a company to produce educational art films. In 1967 he represented the United States at the São Paulo Biennial in Brazil, and in 1985 the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art organized a major retrospective of his work. In 1994 Thiebaud received the National Medal of Arts, the highest award given to an artist by the U.S. government. His art was shown frequently in group and solo exhibitions throughout the 20th and 21st centuries, and retrospectives of his work were held at the Whitney Museum of Art in 2001, in New York City, and in 2010 at the Crocker Art Museum in Sacramento.