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Swann Gallery Exhibition Features "American Beauties"

By MARTHA KENNEDY

"American Beauties: Drawings from the Golden Age of American Illustration," an exhibition of original drawings that features idealized types of feminine American beauty, is on view from June 27 to Sept. 28 in the Swann Gallery of the Library's Thomas Jefferson Building. The drawings were created by artists such as Coles Phillips, Charles Dana Gibson, Nell Brinkley, Wladyslaw Benda, John Held Jr., James Montgomery Flagg, E. Simms Campbell, Peter Arno, Jano Fabry and Harry Beckhoff.

Charles Dana Gibson, "The Sweetest Story Ever Told," ca. 1910

Charles Dana Gibson, "The Sweetest Story Ever Told," ca. 1910

Arresting and gorgeous icons of feminine beauty from America's "golden age of illustration" (1880-1920s) dazzled viewers with an intensity, vividness and variety which captivate audiences today. The creation in the 1890s of the "Gibson Girl" by Charles Dana Gibson (1867-1944) began a decades-long fascination with idealized types of feminine beauty in America. Other gifted illustrators of the era such as Coles Phillips (1880-1927), Wladyslaw Benda (1873-1948), Nell Brinkley (1886-1944) and John Held Jr. (1888-1958) fashioned diverse portrayals of idealized American womanhood which mirrored changing standards of physical beauty. More profoundly, however, these popular images highlighted transformations in women's roles in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. During what historians call the era of the "New Woman," increasing numbers of women sought higher education and pursued romance, marriage, leisure activities and a sense of individuality with greater independence.

With support from the Swann Memorial Fund, this exhibition highlights 17 original drawings selected from outstanding recent acquisitions; they are supplemented with premier examples of graphic art from the Library's Cabinet of American Illustration and the Swann Collection of Caricature and Cartoon, and two rare, bound illustrated volumes.

Charles Dana Gibson invented the Gibson Girl in the 1890s. She first appeared in Life magazine and rapidly set a standard for feminine beauty that endured for two decades. Gibson drew his tall, narrow-waisted ideal in black and white, portraying her as a multi-faceted type, always at ease and fashionable. He depicted her as an equal, sometimes teasing, companion to man and highlighted her interests or talents such as violin-playing in "The Sweetest Story Ever Told," ca. 1910. Gibson's influence on fellow artists can be seen in the stately beauty of "A Quick Change," ca. 1901, by Charlotte Harding (1873-1951). Others created rival icons. Coles Phillips, for example, developed his "Fade-away Girl" through innovative use of negative space–his full-figured beauties blend into backgrounds of colorful, tightly composed designs that graced the covers of Life and Good Housekeeping in the early 1900s. Typically involved in domestic tasks or appraising suitors' gifts as in "Know All Men by These Presents," 1910, the "Phillips Girl" projected a warm allure that differed from the Gibson Girl's winsome reserve. Neither idealized image seriously challenged the patriarchal tradition of separate spheres–public and professional for men, private and domestic for women.

Ethel Plummer, "Vanity Fair on the Avenue," ca. 1914

Ethel Plummer, "Vanity Fair on the Avenue," ca. 1914

The influence of Gibson's and Phillips' romantic ideals waned markedly as the American public and artistic communities were introduced to modern European and American art at the time of the Armory Show of 1913 in New York City. American society also became increasingly urban as cities burgeoned in size. Modernist styles and urbanism influenced younger artists such as Ethel Plummer (1888-1936) and Rita Senger (active 1915-1930s) as they drew new types of beauties. Plummer drew her young women as slim silhouettes, clad in tighter, form-fitting clothing. Shown in an urban setting, they convey a consciousness of themselves as fashionable beings in their attitudes and communicate a poise and confidence that became hallmarks of the modern woman. Rita Senger's lithe beauty dancing on a shore (ca. 1916) embodied a freedom based on insistent individuality. Compared with their predecessors, Plummer's and Senger's figures move freely in more public, open spaces. Both artists also depicted their slender beauties as stylish, flattened figures, defined by sophisticated use of line, color and pattern in drawings that are contemporary with the introduction of modernist styles. Their work possesses a bold, modern simplicity that was prized by Vanity Fair and Vogue. Images from magazines' covers, short story illustrations and advertisements exerted widespread influence, for readers looked not only for entertainment and enlight- enment from these visual sources, but also regarded them as examples to be admired and imitated.

During the World War I era, "new women" sought equality and opportunity through more active roles in the public realm. Nell Brinkley stood out during this period as a female pioneer in the field of illustration–a woman artist who created the "Brinkley Girl," a highly popular icon. She drew active idealistic young women in illustrations for newspaper feature stories that she wrote. "Golden Eyes," a World War I heroine who promoted the sale of Liberty Bonds and supported overseas war efforts, emerges as one of Brinkley's most memorable creations. In her fine-lined Art Nouveau manner, Brinkley portrayed her heroine as a dynamic, windblown symbol of women's active patriotism.

Nell Brinkley, "Golden Eyes with Uncle Sam (dog)," ca. 1918

Nell Brinkley, "Golden Eyes with Uncle Sam (dog)," ca. 1918

Russell Patterson, "Where There's Smoke There's Fire," 1920s

Russell Patterson, "Where There's Smoke There's Fire," 1920s

John Held Jr.'s creation, the flirtatious, flippant flapper, exemplified a revolutionary type of beauty. He delineated her as a stylish, carefree, boyishly slender figure, capturing her assertive, pleasure-seeking nature in a lively, refined style. Held's flapper pervaded popular culture, appearing in Life, Judge, Liberty, College Humor, The New Yorker, and Harper's Bazaar. The flapper's dynamic open outline departed radically from Gibson's calm, long-haired ideal. Demure in dress and manner, the Gibson Girl originated from the more structured, socially choreographed milieu of the Gilded Age of the 1890s. In comparison, the Jazz Age icon, with her scanty clothing, short hair, and forward ways, appeared brazen. She interacted directly and boldly with men, whether dancing or joining them in sports, sometimes with humorous, witty effect as seen in "The Girl Who Gave Him the Cold Shoulder," ca. 1925.

Jaro Fabry, "Katherine Hepburn," ca. 1937

Jaro Fabry, "Katherine Hepburn," ca. 1937

Wladyslaw Benda, Georges Lepape (1887-1971), and Russell Patterson (1893-1977) skillfully incorporated elements of glamour and current fashion into their compelling visions of beauty in the second decade of the 20th century. Fashion and glamor intertwined as women avidly followed the latest trends in clothing, jewelry, and cosmetics through popular art. Polish-born Benda, working in charcoal and watercolor, created the "Benda Girl," whose flawless features and bejeweled form reflected the glamorous taste of the time. Strengths of his distinctive style–skillful modeling of forms, attention to detail, and use of strong color–served him well in drawing the vivid images which adorned the covers and pages of Hearst's International magazine, Cosmopolitan and Liberty. In contrast with Benda, Lepape and Patterson rendered their beauties as stylized figures who indulge in smoking, a pleasure seen as mildly risquŽ and glamorous. Both make minimal use of modeling and depend heavily on the graphic power of elegant, outlined forms, linear patterns of clothing, and trailing smoke to compose strongly decorative, eye-catching designs.

Jaro Fabry (1912-1953) employed a modernist approach related to Held's and Patterson's beauties in creating his drawing of Katharine Hepburn for the cover of Cinema Arts. Applying watercolor with loose, free brushwork, Fabry achieves a fresh, spontaneous portrayal of Hepburn. Thoroughly all-American, she is a fitting choice to appear as an icon. She personifies a singular, individual beauty, yet projects star quality and universal appeal.

These artists' images reveal change and variety in women's roles in society as seen in Gibson's violin player, the heroic Brinkley Girl, Held's flapper, Patterson's smoker, and the actress Hepburn. They also reflect significant shifts in manners and mores. Far from superficial, solely concerned with surface beauty, these images illuminate the complex trajectory traced by the evolution of the modern woman.

Martha H. Kennedy is the exhibition curator and Swann Curatorial Project Assistant in the Prints and Photographs Division. The Caroline and Erwin Swann Memorial Fund for Caricature and Cartoon supports a continuing program at the Library of Congress of preservation, publication, exhibition, acquisition and scholarly research in the related fields of cartoon, caricature and illustration.

Back to June 2002 - Vol 61, No. 6

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