Merry Christmas from Indiana Illustrators &
Hoosier Cartoonists!
Text copyright 2022, 2024 Terence E. Hanley
Life Stories of Artists, Illustrators, and Cartoonists of Indiana
Merry Christmas from Indiana Illustrators &
Hoosier Cartoonists!
Text copyright 2022, 2024 Terence E. Hanley
Harry Allen Davis, Jr., was a Hoosier artist. Born in Hillsboro, Indiana, on May 21, 1914, he grew up in Brownsburg and studied at Herron School of Art in Indianapolis. He received his bachelor of fine arts in 1938 and studied in Rome in 1938-1940. In 1942, Davis joined the U.S. Army and returned to Italy where he soon became a combat artist. He taught at Herron after the war, retiring in 1983. Davis was married to another artist, Lois Peterson. He died on February 9, 2006, at age ninety-one.
Early this year, Traces of Indiana and Midwestern History, the magazine of the Indiana Historical Society, featured Davis in a cover story entitled "Soldier and Artist: Harry A. Davis Jr. at War." The author is Ray E. Boomhower, editor of the magazine. You can read about Davis and see many of his paintings and drawings in the Winter 2022 issue of Traces.
Evaline Ness was born Evaline Michelow on April 24, 1911, in Union City, Ohio. Her father was Albert Michelow (1867-1932), a Swedish-born brickmason. Her mother was Myrtle W. (Carter) Michelow (1875-1958), a dressmaker born in Virginia. Evaline's parents were married in 1898 in North Carolina. They had four children, Rudolph, Eloise, Josephine, and Evaline, the youngest. Maybe the title character in Evaline's book Josefina February (1963), shown below, was named for her older sister.
The Michelow family lived in North Carolina, Virginia, and Ohio before settling in Pontiac, Michigan, when Evaline was a young child. She graduated from Pontiac Central High School in 1929. In 1930, at age eighteen, she lived with her parents in Pontiac and worked as a librarian at the city public library. In 1931-1932, she studied to be a librarian at Ball State Teachers College, now Ball State University, in Muncie, Indiana, thus her connection to the Hoosier State. While in Muncie, she was also a fashion model. After leaving Ball State, Evaline Michelow studied at the Chicago Art Institute from 1933 to 1935. She worked as a fashion illustrator throughout the 1930s.
Evaline Michelow was married five times and was known by her second husband's surname. Her first marriage was to a man named McAndrews. He seems to have disappeared from the public record. They were divorced sometime in the 1930s. Her second husband was Eliott Ness (1903-1957) of Untouchables fame, whom she met on a train traveling between Chicago and New York. Both were married at the time but got divorced soon enough, he just in time apparently to marry her. (Eliot Ness' divorce came in 1939 in Florida. He and Evaline were married in late October 1939.) The couple lived in Cleveland and Washington, D.C. They divorced in 1945 or 1946 or 1951, but she kept his name. There were three other husbands, last of whom was Arnold A. Bayard (1904-1988), an engineer and wine connoisseur. They had homes in New York and Florida. The two lie together--or at least they have headstones next to each other--at Snow Cemetery in Truro, Massachusetts. As you might guess, Evaline Ness was a free spirit. "I don't need a husband all the time," she said. And though children intrigued her and she wrote and illustrated books about them, she never had any of her own.
Evaline Ness was a fashion illustrator, magazine illustrator, commercial artist, painter, and children's book author and illustrator. Her first illustrations for a children's book were for Story of Ophelia by Mary J. Gibbons (1954). Other books which she illustrated include:
I have run out of time again this year, and so I will close out 2021 with a simple image of children, drawn by Florence Sarah Winship (1900-1987). Soon, now, it will be time for bed . . .
Sharon Katherine Smith Koester Kane has died. Known for her wonderfully made drawings of babies, toddlers, young children, and teenagers, she began her career as a published artist, illustrator, and cartoonist while she was herself still a child. Her picture-making went on for the next eighty years, ending only last month with her death.
Sharon Katherine Smith was born on February 18, 1932, in South Bend, Indiana, to Stuyvesant C. Smith, an engineer at Bendix Aviation, and Katherine Eunice (Young) Smith, also an artist and writer. "Ever since I can remember I have been drawing," Sharon Smith wrote in 1950, "mostly pictures of children." She had her first published drawing in Children's Activities Magazine (now Highlights For Children) when she was nine years old. Later she had her work published in Scholastic and Seventeen and became a regular contributor to Child Life and The Christian Science Monitor. But it was for her children's books that she is remembered so well today.
As a student at Mishawaka High School, Sharon Smith wrote and illustrated a humorous teen advice column for the school newspaper, the Alltold. Her mother encouraged her to submit her cartoons to the South Bend Tribune. "Atomic Teens," printed on the newspaper's teen page, was the result. In May 1950, McNaught Syndicate picked up the teenaged artist's feature, renaming it "Buttons an' Beaux" for national syndication. "Buttons an' Beaux" ran in newspapers until 1952. The popular song "Buttons and Bows" had won an Academy Award for best song in 1948. The punning title of Sharon's comic panel would have capitalized on the popularity of the song.
Sharon Smith attended Bradley University and graduated from the University of Wisconsin in 1954. The following year she married George C. Koester. While living with her husband in Seattle, she did freelance artwork as well as design work for a children's program on a local television station. The young couple spent two years in Seattle. In 1957, when she was just twenty-five years old, Sharon had her first book published. Entitled Where Are You Going Today?, it had been submitted to its publisher by Sharon's mother without her knowledge. More than two dozen children's books followed, her last being Kitty & Me from 2014.
Sharon Smith was married and divorced twice. Her second husband was Hawaiian historian and author Herbert "Herb" Kawainui Kāne (1928-2011). The late Mr. Kāne was an extraordinary artist and illustrator in his own right.
Sharon Kane lived in Glencoe, Illinois, and Plano, Texas. She died on November 3, 2021, at age eighty-nine. Her art is in the collections of the Northern Indiana Historical Society and the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco. She also created a mural in the Bloomingdale Public Library in Illinois. The scene is a woodland scene, perhaps recalling her childhood in Mishawaka. "It was a rural life," she remembered, "with hills and woodland and wide open spaces." These are the things we remember of our Hoosier homes.
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To read more on Sharon Smith Kane, see "Sharon Smith Kane, February 18, 1932-November 3, 2021" by Andrew Farago on the website of The Comics Journal, dated December 13, 2021, by clicking here.
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I have pictures from just one of Sharon Smith Kane's books to show today. These are from Tie My Shoe by Helen Wing (1964). The interior drawings shown here are two of my favorites and two of the best from the book, I think. These and other drawings made by women artists show just how well women depict children, much better, in my opinion, than the average male artist. Men tend to draw children as miniature adults, whereas women see and understand and can draw the essential childness of children. Anyway, please enjoy these pictures and join me in remembering the life and work of Sharon Smith Kane.
Updated on July 17, 2022.
Original text copyright 2021, 2024 Terence E. Hanley
Comedian Herb Shriner famously said, "I wasn't born in Indiana but I moved there as soon as I heard about it." He wasn't alone. Since its beginnings, the Hoosier State has been a destination for pioneers, settlers, refugees, migrants, escaped and manumitted slaves, industrial workers, and just plain, ordinary farmers, workers, artists, and others. Early on, people must have sensed that nothing better would await them beyond the rich and generous lands of Indiana. And so they stayed.
Johnny Appleseed was an adopted Hoosier. Born John Chapman on September 26, 1774, he was a native of Leominster, Massachusetts. Like Abraham Lincoln a generation later, he was orphaned with the death of his mother. His father remarried. Later in life, the elder Chapman pulled up stakes and moved to Ohio. Johnny had gone west before him, first to Pennsylvania, then to Ohio. It was in Ohio that John Chapman earned his nickname, Johnny Appleseed.
Johnny Appleseed lived a long life. In his later days, he lived in Fort Wayne, Indiana, and that's where he died after reaching his allotted threescore and ten. Johnny's end came on March 18, 1845. He was buried in Fort Wayne, though no one knows exactly where.
Abraham Lincoln (1809-1865) was probably the most famous adopted Hoosier. He was born near Hodgenville, Kentucky, on February 12, 1809. In the fall of 1816, when Abe was just seven years old, his father, Thomas Lincoln (1778-1851), moved his young family to what was then the Indiana Territory. Not long after, on December 11, 1816, Indiana became a state. Like Johnny Appleseed before him, Abe Lincoln's mother and a younger brother died when he was young. Nancy Hanks Lincoln (1784-1818) lies buried in Indiana, near her Spencer County home. Her son said of her, "All that I am, or hope to be, I owe to my angel mother."
Abe Lincoln spent his formative years in the Hoosier State, raised there by his parents and his stepmother, Sarah Bush Johnston Lincoln (1788-1869). In March 1830, he moved with his family to Illinois. He had just turned twenty-one. Kentucky and Illinois have their claims upon the Great Emancipator, but Indiana has its claim, too. I might be biased, but I would call it equal.
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In 1964, Scholastic Books published a children's biography, Johnny Appleseed, written by Eva Moore and illustrated by Judith Ann Lawrence. Born in 1942, Eva Moore lives or has lived in Montauk, New York. Also known as J.A. Lawrence and Judy Blish, Judith Ann Lawrence is an author and an artist. She was married to the science fiction author James Blish (1921-1975). Judy has a new book out. You can find out more about it by clicking here. |
Original text copyright 2021, 2204 Terence E. Hanley
I'll close this series and the year with two illustrations for children's books, plus a magazine gag cartoon.
Text copyright 2020, 2024 Terence E. Hanley
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An illustration by Morrow from Frederick Douglass: Freedom Fighter by Lillie Patterson, a Discovery Book published by Garrard Publishing Company of Champaign, Illinois, in 1965. Lillie Griselda Patterson (1917-1999) was an author of children's books and a librarian in the Baltimore Public Schools. She also wrote about Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Booker T. Washington, and Francis Scott Key, whose statue was knocked down recently in San Francisco. I wonder what Ms. Patterson, who was black and a creator and an educator, would have thought of that.
Update (July 6, 2020): Now comes word that a statue of Frederick Douglass in Rochester, New York, has also been toppled. The date was July 5, 2020, the 168th anniversary of his famous speech, "What, to the American slave, is your Fourth of July?" At this point, the question must be: what statue in America will stand? |
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First, a charming illustration by John Dukes McKee (1899-1956) of Kokomo, from My American Heritage, collected by Ralph Henry and Lucile Pannell (1959). |
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Next, the cover design for More About the Live Dolls by Josephine Scribner Gates (1906), an drawing created by Virginia Keep (1878-1962) of Indianapolis. |
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Finally, what the season is really about, an image of the birth of Jesus Christ by Sister Esther Newport (1901-1986) of Clinton, Indiana, from the book A Bible History: With a History of the Church by Rev. Stephen J. McDonald and Elizabeth Jackson (1932, 1940). |