Sunday, May 3, 2026

Andrew Wyeth's Friend Christina Olson

Born May 3, 1894, Christina Olson and her brother Alvaro lived on their farm in Cushing, ME. She had a degenerative muscular disorder known as Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease, but she disliked using crutches and a wheelchair. Andrew Wyeth befriended the siblings and did many paintings of them--especially Christina--and their farm. Although Wyeth used his wife Betsy's body for the figure, he used Christina's head and thin arms as she crawled along the ground, the way she preferred to get around. "Christina's World" (1948) is the most famous of his Olson paintings--perhaps of his entire oeuvre. Here are several photos of Christina and other Wyeth paintings. Andrew and Betsy are buried close to the Olsons in the Cushing cemetery. 

 

Kent State Anniversary

On May 4, 1970, three days after nationwide May Day demonstrations, a rally took place at Kent State University, a protest about the expansion of American military into Cambodia. At 12:24 PM, twenty-eight National Guard soldiers fired about 67 rounds toward students, killing four and wounding nine. None of the students was armed, although lies were reported that the demonstrating students were violent and that there was a sniper. Allison Krause and Jeffrey Miller were part of the rally, while Sandra Scheuer and William Schroeder were simply watching the rally between their classes. A young woman who was not a student, 14-year-old runaway Mary Ann Vecchio, was photographed wailing over the body of Jeffrey Miller. The photo became the most famous of the tragedy and won a Pulitzer. 

Here's an article about Ohio Gov. Jim Rhodes' legacy in the shooting.  

The Jewish community at Kent took the lead in commemorating the event on campus on its anniversary. Krause, Miller, and Scheuer were Jewish but the Jewish response honored all four students and remembered those who were injured. See this article. 

On May 14, ten days after the Kent State shootings, police fired upon students at the historically black college, Jackson State College in Jackson, MS. Phillip Lafayette Gibbs and James Earl Green were killed and 12 others were wounded.  

An earlier massacre occurred on February 8, 1968, at the campus of South Carolina State College in Orangeburg, SC. A crowd of African American students were protesting racial segregation at a local bowling alley. One city police officer and nine highway patrolmen fired into the crowd, injuring twenty-eight, and killing three: Samuel Ephesians Hammond, Delano Herman Middleton, and Henry Ezekial Smith. The Orangeburg tragedy received less media coverage than the two in 1970. 

Soon after the Kent State shootings, Neil Young quickly wrote the song "Ohio." Crosby, Stills, Nash, and Young recorded it by May 21, and the song was released in June.  


Happy 200th Birthday, Frederic Edwin Church

It's the 200th birthday of a favorite artist! Frederic Edwin Church was born May 4, 1826. Here are a few of his paintings: "The Heart of the Andes" (1859), "Cotopaxi" (1862), "The Icebergs" (1861), and "West Rock, New Haven" (1849). Stephen Jay Gould wrote an article about that "Andes" painting and its scientific significance. Church had painted it in tribute to German scientist Alexander von Humboldt, who was the first European to attempt to climb the ice-covered mountain in the picture, Chimborazo in Ecuador. Church was even going to ship the large painting (5-1/2 feet by 10 feet) to Humboldt in Berlin, so he could see it, but Humboldt died before those arrangements could be made. Today, the painting is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, in the same room as Emanuel Leutze's famous "Washington Crossing the Delaware."

There is a brand-new biography of church by Victoria Johnson, "Glorious Country: How the Artist Frederic Church Brought the World to America and America to the World."