Skip to main content

Link to Smithsonian homepage

Smithsonian Music

Main menu

  • Calendar
  • Listen
  • Learn
    • Ask Smithsonian
    • Collections Spotlights
    • Music Stories
  • Watch
  • Blog

Three Sandwiches

Object Details

Luce Center Label
Wayne Thiebaud has created hundreds of images of food, from sandwiches and fish to lollipops, cakes, and gumball machines. He was inspired by "I Macchiaioli," a group of nineteenth-century Italian artists who built up thick layers of paint to heighten contrasts between light and shadow. Thiebaud took this idea further by applying the paint so that it evoked the physical substances in the image, such as soft sliced bread, creamy icing, or rich slabs of butter. The thick layers of paint and absence of any other details in this painting transform the familiar display into a surreal landscape that plays with our sense of scale. The packaging tells us the objects are sandwiches, but their shapes evoke huge, looming pyramids in the middle of a desert at twilight.
Luce Object Quote
"[I remember] seeing rows of pies or a tin of pie with a piece cut out of it and one piece sitting beside it. Those little vedúta [views] in fragmented circumstances were always poetic to me." Thiebaud, quoted in Arthur, Realists at Work, 1983
Data Source
Smithsonian American Art Museum
Artist
Wayne Thiebaud, born Mesa, AZ 1920-died Sacramento, CA 2021
Date
1961
Credit Line
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Gift of the Woodward Foundation
Medium
oil on canvas
Dimensions
12 1/8 x 16 1/8 in. (30.8 x 40.9 cm)
Type
Painting
There are restrictions for re-using this image. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page .
International media Interoperability Framework
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more.
View manifest View in Mirador Viewer

Link to Smithsonian homepage

  • About
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy
  • YouTube
  • Twitter
Back to Top