
Wayne Thiebaud
Avocado Salad, 1962
Price upon request



Artwork Details
The Museum of Modern Art, Art Lending Service, New York
Lent to the above by Allan Stone Galleries, Inc., New York
Mr. and Mrs. Sosland, acquired from the above, 1968 (or before)
Hindman, Thursday, September 28, 2023, lot 00105
Private Collection, acquired from the above sale

Wayne Thiebaud's Avocado Salad (1962) arrives at an exquisite cultural inflection point. Though today the avocado is ubiquitous, in 1962 it remained a largely regional novelty—popular on the West Coast but still a curiosity to much of middle-class America. The California Avocado Advisory Board had been formed just the year before to broaden its appeal, and Thiebaud painted this work at precisely the moment of the fruit's ascent. It is simultaneously a celebration of everyday beauty and a quietly prescient cultural document.
Set against Thiebaud's characteristic pale blue ground, the composition is a study in symmetry and sensory pleasure. A round plate holds halved avocados, hard-boiled eggs, and tomato wedges arranged with the deliberate, almost ceremonial tidiness of a diner display. The palette—cool avocado greens, clean egg yellows, the deep blue of the plate—glows with a painterly richness that is both appetizing and reverential. A welcome departure from his celebrated desserts, the work exemplifies Thiebaud's conviction that the humblest subjects of daily life are worthy of the most careful, joyful attention.
The provenance is storied too. Shortly after completion, Avocado Salad entered the Art Lending Service of The Museum of Modern Art, New York—a pioneering program that allowed museum members to rent original works for their homes, with an option to purchase. Lent through the Allan Stone Gallery, the work was offered at $35 for two months or $52 for three, with a purchase price of $750 less fees. A program that also circulated works by Alexander Calder and Joan Miró, the ALS was an early champion of the idea that art belongs in daily life—a philosophy this painting embodies completely.
“Common objects become strangely uncommon when removed from their context and ordinary ways of being seen.”— Wayne Thiebaud
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