 In the 1930s, '40s, and '50s -- if you saw a sketch or portrait of a child
on the cover of Ladies Home Journal or Woman's Home Companion,
or inside the magazines' advertising, say, Colgate's Talc Powder, Cream of Wheat,
or Squibb's Cod Liver Oil, you were probably seeing the work of Maud Tausey
Fangel. For a good part of the first half of the twentieth century, Ms. Fangel
was the children's artist in our country -- her illustrations of ruddy-cheeked,
doe-eyed, curly-locked children were everywhere. They set the standard for their
day and made Ms. Fangel a kind of celebrity -- the subject of frequent feature
articles and a much in demand children's portrait painter, who was commissioned
to do pictures of the Dionne Quintuplets and the children of Chiang Kai Shek.
Maud Tausey was born on January 1st, 1881, the daughter of a Professor of Divinity
at Tufts College, later Tufts University, in the Boston area. She began drawing
in earnest when she was a teeanger and studied at Boston's School of Fine Arts
before coming to New York City on a scholarship to Cooper Union to continue
her studies. Soon she was presenting her portfolio to the art director of Good
Housekeeping, Guy Fangel, who gave her her first commerical assignments
and later proposed marriage to her. Their son, Lloyd, began Ms. Fangel's fascination
with drawing babies -- she did more than 1500 pictures of him before he was
three -- and later she would immortalize his face as the boy on the Cracker
Jack box.
Many of Ms. Fangel's pictures were done in pastels, which allowed her to capture
the movements of her young subjects in swift, impressionistic strokes. Most
of Ms. Fangel's models were children from poor families, from orphanages, and
settlement houses. Unaware of this, one newspaper referred to these children
as "glamor babies." But Ms. Fangel understood the youngsters who sat and wiggled
and dozed in the high chair for her a little more deeply than the correspondent:
"I have a strange, persistent feeling that babies have a consciousness that
we do not possess," she wrote. "They seem not yet to have lost an intelligence
brought with them from another world. They are still wrapped in the mystery
of their source."
When she died at the age of 87, Ms. Fangel was working on a book about a day
in the life of an African-American child. But in the racially divided America
of the1950s, every publisher she submitted the project to turned it down, unwilling
to move forward on an idea that was years ahead of its time. But that was always
true of Maud Tausey Fangel. She and the children she painted were waiting for
the future to catch up.
Copyright 2007© John Cech
http://www.recess.ufl.edu/transcripts/2007/0102.shtml
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