試す - 無料

GIRL, INTERRUPTED

Vogue US

|

December 2024

Anna Weyant found extraordinary fame as an artist before she had reached her mid-20s. Then came another kind of attention. Dodie Kazanjian meets the painter at the start of a fresh chapter

GIRL, INTERRUPTED

Anna Weyant has come a long way in a short time. Even before her debut show at the New York gallery 56 Henry in 2019, there was a waiting list for her work—strange images of young girls whose inner lives seem potentially disturbing, painted in the style of the Dutch Masters, and of the current master John Currin. She was 24 when that first show opened, full of blond innocence and extremely shy. The sharks were already circling the tank, and Ellie Rines, 56 Henry’s young owner, was determined to keep her from being swallowed up by success. “She was so directly speaking to her generation,” Rines remembers, “and I thought she was hitting on something really unique.” There was a healthy dose of mischief and humor in Weyant’s paintings. “Part of what makes it so funny is that it’s coming from someone who seems so innocent,” says Rines.

imageFast-forward to 2024. Weyant has conquered the art world instead of being swallowed by it. She shows with the Gagosian gallery (the youngest to do so), which is also Currin’s gallery.

“John was the reason I started painting figures,” Weyant tells me. “I saw one of his paintings in my second year at art school, and it changed my life.” (Her other continuing subject is the still life—her flowers or whatever objects she chooses are as voluptuous and individual as her young women.) Currin says, “She seems to be close to something interesting in terms of good taste and bad taste, disciplined and lazy, controlled and sort of domineering. She’s aware of the power of how terrible figurative painting can be—its strange combination of very low status and very high status, and its obvious uselessness in a sea of photography and cameras.”

image

Vogue US からのその他のストーリー

Vogue US

Vogue US

RANGE LIFE

Kendall Jenner and Gigi Hadid have a friendship forged in fashion—and share a love of the great, glamorous outdoors. By Chloe Malle. Photographed by Lachlan Bailey.

time to read

11 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

Community Theater

Ragtime—Lear deBessonet's debut production as artistic director of Lincoln Center Theater—offers a gripping and complex vision of the American dream that's eerily prescient.

time to read

8 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

A HOUSE IN THE HILLS

Michael Govan and Katherine Ross searched for years for the right house. What they found was an architectural marvel and a blank canvas.

time to read

6 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

FRENCH CONNECTION

Marc Jacobs and A.P.C.'s Jean Touitou have long admired each other's work. Now, reports Olivia Singer, they're working together on a capsule collection that celebrates their shared tastes.

time to read

3 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

The Next Chapter

In an excerpt from Malala Yousafzai's new memoir, she recalls the start of a life-changing romance and the barriers that stood in her way. Photographed by Vivek Vadoliya.

time to read

10 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

THE AGE OF INFLUENCE

A report on the power of growth in the menopause era.

time to read

4 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

NEW FOUNDATIONS

Calder Gardens in Philadelphia pays ethereal tribute to a legend of American art.

time to read

7 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

PANEL DISCUSSION

At Milan's Fabscarte atelier, hand-painted murals blur the line between fine art and interior design.

time to read

2 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

STEADY ON

Can you correct a lifetime of imbalance with a quick stroll on a slackline? Sally Singer tries to straighten it out.

time to read

5 mins

October 2025

Vogue US

Vogue US

Out and About

DO WE NEED AN EXCUSE to celebrate the great outdoors? Fashion month gave us one last spring when utility fabrics, city-country silhouettes, blanket coats, pannier bags, brightly hued waders, and all manner of zips, hoods, snaps, and buckles proceeded down the runway. Designers were dreaming, it seemed, of heading into the woods, onto the slopes, out in the wild.

time to read

1 mins

October 2025

Listen

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size