Monday, December 24, 2012

WILLIAM WALLACE DENSLOW, ILLUSTRATOR OF THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OFOZ..1856-1919



WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 2010

WILLIAM WALLACE DENSLOW, ILLUSTRATOR OF THE WONDERFUL WIZARD OFOZ..1856-1919




















W.W. Denslow

William Wallace Denslow, photographed in 1900.
Birth name William Wallace Denslow
Born May 25, 1856(1856-05-25)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Died May 27, 1915 (aged 59)
Bermuda
Nationality American
Field Illustration
Training NationalAcademy of Design
Cooper Union
Works The Wonderful Wizard of Oz
collaborations with L. Frank Baum
Influenced Donald Abbott


The Black Sheep, from a 1901 edition of Mother Goose.
Denslow's illustration for "There was an Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe", from a 1901 edition of Mother Goose.William Wallace Denslow (5 May 1856 – 27 May 1915) – usually credited as W. W. Denslow – was an illustrator and caricaturist remembered for his work incollaboration with author L. Frank Baum, especially his illustrations of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.[1] Denslow was an editorial cartoonist with a strong interest in politics, which has fueled political interpretations of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.

Born in Philadelphia, Denslow spent brief periods at the National Academy of Design and the Cooper Union in New York, but was largely self-educated and self-trained. In the 1880s he traveled about the United States as an artist and newspaper reporter; he came to Chicago for the World's Columbian Exposition in 1893, and chose to stay. Denslow acquired his earliest reputation as a poster artist; he also designed books and bookplates, and was the first artist invited to work at the Roycroft Press.[2]

Denslow may have met Baum at the Chicago Press Club; both men were members. Besides The Wonderful Wizard of Oz, Denslow also illustrated Baum's books By the Candelabra's Glare, Father Goose: His Book, and Dot and Tot of Merryland. Baum and Denslow held the copyrights to most of these works jointly.

After Denslow quarreled with Baum over royalty shares from the 1902 stage adaptation of The Wizard of Oz, for which Baum wrote the script and Denslow designed the sets and costumes, Baum determined not to work with him again. (As co-copyright-holder, Denslow demanded an equal share in royalites with Baum and composer Paul Tietjens.) Denslow illustrated an edition of traditional nursery rhymes titled Denslow's Mother Goose (1901), along with Denslow's Night Before Christmas (1902) and the 18-volume Denslow's Picture Books series (1903-4).[3] He also used his copyright to the art of the Baum books to create newspaper comic strips featuring Father Goose and the Scarecrow and Tin Woodman during the first decade of the twentieth century.

The royalties from the print and stage versions of The Wizard of Oz were sufficient to allow Denslow to purchase Bluck's Island in Bermuda,[4][5] and crown himself King Denslow I. However, he drank his money away, and he died in obscurity, of pneumonia.


Later Oz Illustrations

Dorothy meets the Cowardly Lion, from the first edition of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz.John R. Neill illustrated the rest of the Oz series. He made many changes in the appearance of the characters, not all at once.

In 1944, artist Evelyn Copelman became the next Oz illustrator, when she illustrated the 1944 Bobbs-Merrill edition of The Wizard of Oz. Although the book credit for the new illustrations reads "Adapted from the famous pictures by W.w. Denslow", Copelman's versions of the characters were largely based on the way they looked in the 1939 MGM Technicolor film version, although the Cowardly Lion looked quite different, and Dorothy had braids rather than long pigtails, as Judy Garland did in the film.

Copelman's illustrations of the Oz characters were much darker, more realistic and less cartoon-like than those of her predecessors. They were reprinted in 1956, in the edition of The Wizard of Oz published by Grosset & Dunlap, as part of a series labeled the Illustrated Junior Library. 1956 was also the year that the MGM film came to television (see The Wizard of Oz on television).


The footstone of William Wallace Denslow in Kensico CemeteryThis edition of the book was popular throughout the 1960s, as showings of The Wizard of Oz on television gained an ever larger following. The Illustrated Junior Library edition of The Wizard is still in print today, though with a cover illustration by a different artist.
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The Man Behind the Man Behind Oz: W. W. Denslow at 150
by Michael Patrick HearnJuly 05, 2006

The year 2006 marks the 150th birthday of not only L. Frank Baum, the author of The Wonderful Wizard of Oz (1900) but also that of W. W. Denslow, the original illustrator of the Great American Fairy Tale. Although remembered today almost solely for that one work, Denslow made significant contributions to other areas of American commercial art. Denslow was a character. The poet Eunice Tietjens described him as “a delightful old reprobate who looked like a walrus.” He married three times and divorced three times. Alcohol finally did him in. But he produced some of the most important children’s books of his day.

Born in Philadelphia on May 5, 1856, William Wallace Denslow began submitting illustrations to the magazines when he turned 16. He soon developed into an extraordinarily adaptable designer and went wherever the work was. He roamed the countryside drawing lithographs for county atlases in New York and Pennsylvania. He designed theater posters and other advertising in Philadelphia and New York City. When the daily press started using pictures, he went from paper from paper from New York to Chicago to Denver to San Francisco and back to Chicago. He earned his first international reputation for his newspaper, book and magazine posters during the art poster craze of the late 1890s. He was the first professional artist Elbert Hubbard invited to work at the Roycroft Shops in East Aurora, New York. There he spent part of the year drawing cartoons, posters and bookplates and decorating limited editions. He supplemented this income by designing dozens of book covers for Rand McNally and supplying hundreds of little pictures for Montgomery Ward’s mail order catalogues. In almost every design could be found his totem—a tiny seahorse.

Denslow did not think much of entering the juvenile field until he met Baum. At the time the author was editing a trade journal for window trimmers, but he wanted to write children’s books. His first, Mother Goose in Prose, came out in 1897, and it was also the first book Maxfield Parrish ever illustrated. Baum and Denslow began working on a book of nonsense verse for boys and girls; but because both author and artist wanted the pictures in color, no Chicago firm was willing to invest in the project. They finally convinced the George M. Hill Co. to publish Father Goose, His Book if Baum and Denslow paid all printing costs. To everyone’s pleasant surprise, it became the best-selling children’s book of 1899.

The Wonderful Wizard of Oz in 1900 was an even more impressive achievement. As Baum and Denslow were again responsible for all printing costs, they created a truly enticing volume. With its twenty-four colored plates, and two-color headpieces and tailpieces, chapter title pages, and other delightful marginalia, The Wonderful Wizard of Oz is one of the most lavishly produced children’s books ever published in America. Baum’s story was a challenge. Denslow admitted that he had to “work out and invent characters, costumes, and a multitude of other details for which there is no data—and there never can be in original fairy tales.” And he succeeded brilliantly. Denslow’s contribution to the book is all the more remarkable when one realizes that he drew all of these pictures in black and white and then had the printers add the colors.

Denslow was first and foremost a comic artist, and Baum’s whimsical characters gave him much to play with. “To make children laugh, you must tell them stories of action,” Denslow explained. “I tell my stories with pictures, and I can often indicate action by expression. Action and expression, then, are two of my mainstays, and when you add the incongruous, you have the triad that I rely on.” His little figures are always doing something, always acting and reacting; and Denslow made the Scarecrow and the Tin Woodman his own. “I made twenty-five sketches of those two monkeys before I was satisfied with them,” he explained. “I experimented with all sorts of straw waistcoats and sheet-iron cravats before I was satisfied.” The Cowardly Lion and Toto too demonstrate Denslow’s skill with comparative anatomy. He further enlarged the magic of Oz with his amusing anthropomorphized architecture.

Despite their success together, Baum and Denslow produced only one more children’s book, the pretty fairy tale Dot and Tot of Merryland (1901). The two bitterly clashed over the 1902 musical extravaganza based on their most famous book and went their separate ways. Denslow left for New York where he drew an early Sunday comic strip “Billy Bounce,” cowrote and designed another musical extravaganza The Pearl and the Pumpkin, and continued to illustrate successful children’s books. Denslow’s Mother Goose (1901), Denslow’s Night Before Christmas (1902), and the eighteen volumes of “Denslow’s Picture Books” (1903-1904) were all enormous sellers. With his considerable profits from the plays and books, he bought a small island in Bermuda, built a “castle” on it, and crowned himself King Denslow I of Denslow Island. But all fashions fade. Denslow began drinking heavily as his career went into a slump. He spent his last years working for a third-rate advertising agency in New York, drawing postcards, sheet music covers, advertising booklets, and an occasional magazine illustration. In 1915, he unexpectedly sold a cover to the popular humor weekly Life, went on a bender with the money, caught pneumonia and died. He was only 58 years old.

The children’s book is a true collaborative art. The pictures are as important as the texts. Lewis Carroll had his John Tenniel, A. A. Milne had his E. H. Shephard, and L. Frank Baum had his W. W. Denslow. There might not have been The Wonderful Wizard of Oz if not for the illustrator. Therefore, it is only appropriate that in the year of Baum’s sesquicentennial that we celebrate Denslow too.

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