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Don Freeman

Don Freeman (August 11, 1908 – February 1, 1978) was an American painter, printmaker, cartoonist, and an illustrator and writer of children's books. He was active from the 1930s to the 1970s[1] and often used Times Square as the backdrop of his memorable works.[2]

Don Freeman
Freeman at work c. 1954
Born(1908-08-11)August 11, 1908
San Diego, California
DiedFebruary 1, 1978(1978-02-01) (aged 69)
New York City
NationalityAmerican
Area(s)Cartoonist, Penciller
Notable works
Corduroy
donfreeman.info

Early life

Freeman was born in San Diego, California. He attended high school in St. Louis, and moved to New York City in late 1928. He studied at the San Diego School of Fine Arts and, after graduation, he earned passage to New York by playing the cornet with a ship's orchestra.[2] He arrived at the city days before the stock market crash of 1929 and earned money as a dance band musician.[3] He enrolled at the Art Students League of New York where he studied graphic design and lithography under John Sloan, Harry Wickey, and Kathryn E. Cherry.[4]

Career

Frequent subjects of Freeman's included Broadway theater, politics, and the circus. Freeman was known for carrying a sketchbook with him wherever he went. His images depicted New York City, and the faces of the people he observed on the streets, in the theaters, and in the subways. They often included images of showgirls, Bowery Boys, drunks, apple sellers, window washers and numerous citizens of the city that were down on their luck. Freeman was also a jazz musician and the brother of hotel entrepreneur Warren Freeman.

As Freeman's career progressed, he lightened his palette and depicted more upbeat subjects. In 1951, he began illustrating children's books. His wife, Lydia, who was also an accomplished artist, authored some of the books Freeman illustrated. The Freemans eventually moved to Santa Barbara, California, where they spent the remainder of their lives.[5]

Don Freeman was first introduced to children's literature when William Saroyan asked him to illustrate several books. These include Human Comedy, which is considered one of his best-known works.[2] However, his greatest influence came from the artist Honoré Daumier. Freeman studied many of Daumier's works, particularly his caricatures.[2] He also owned a large collection of books on the artist.

Throughout Don Freeman's career, he was the writer and illustrator of more than 20 children's books. He is best known for his publication of Corduroy (later became a 1990s animated direct-to-video series and a Canadian-produced television program was premiered on the PBS's "Bookworm Bunch" block in 2000). Although he came up with many of his ideas on his own, his wife Lydia Freeman contributed greatly to his success; indeed, she co-wrote two books with him, Chuggy and the Blue Caboose and Pet of the Met. She was very influential on her husband's work, as he relied on her for inspiration for his pieces. He would read his work aloud to her as well as any children around in order to gain feedback on a particular piece.[6] Lydia too became a well-known artist in her later life. In his autobiography "Come One, Come All![7] Don humorously admits that of the two, she was the better (watercolor) artist.

"Simplicity is the essence of children's-book stories, not simple-mindedness", Don Freeman once stated when speaking to an audience that was interested in writing, illustrating, and publishing children's books.[8]

When Freeman lived in New York City during the 1930s, 1940s, and early 1950s, he was a brilliant illustrator of city life in the best traditions of Social Realism. His subjects were the actors and actresses of Broadway—from Orson Welles to Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne to the man in the street or the charwomen who scrubbed the stage after the actors and the audience went home. His cartoons and other illustrations appeared regularly in the New York Herald Tribune, The New York Times, The Christian Science Monitor, and Theater Magazine.

From 1936 to 1968, Freeman self-published Don Freeman's Newsstand. It was published as a quarterly magazine for its first decade and then irregularly. The tagline read "Signs of the Times in Lithographs." The periodical documented the daily life in New York City during and after the Great Depression and during the Second World War and featured articles by many well known writers and personalities of the time. In later volumes, Freeman illustrated life in post-war Los Angeles. The journal contained original lithographs.[9]

In 1976, Freeman was recognized by the City of New York for his body of work portraying the city. The New York Daily News reported on the Citation from Mayor Abraham D. Beame, which was presented to Freeman at the opening of a one-man retrospective exhibition.[10] In a measure of Freeman's national fame, The Christian Science Monitor covered the 1976 exhibition, as well as a 1978 retrospective, both of which showcased Freeman's drawings, oils, prints, and his limited-edition self-published periodical, Don Freeman's Newsstand.[11][12][13][14]

In 2018, Freeman's work was featured in "A City for Corduroy," an exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York.

Selected works

[clarification needed]

  • It Shouldn't Happen (Harcourt, Brace, 1945), 212 pp., LCCN 45-7182
  • Come One, Come All! (Rinehart, 1949) – "drawn from memory by Don Freeman", LCCN 49-11554
  • Chuggy and the Blue Caboose, written by Don and Lydia Freeman (Viking, 1951)
  • Pet of the Met, Don and Lydia Freeman (1953)
  • Beady Bear (1954)
  • Mop Top (1955)
  • Fly High, Fly Low (1957), 1958 Caldecott Honor recipient
  • The Night the Lights Went Out (1958)
  • Norman the Doorman (1959)
  • Space Witch (1959)
  • Cyrano the Crow (1960)
  • Come Again, Pelican (1961)
  • Ski Pup (1963)
  • Dandelion (1964)
  • The Turtle and the Dove (1964)
  • A Rainbow of My Own (1966)
  • Angelenos, Then and Now (LA City School District, 1966), LCCN 78-301016
  • The Guard Mouse (1967)
  • Add-a-line Alphabet (1968)
  • Corduroy (1968)
  • Quiet! There's a Canary in the Library (1969)
  • Tilly Witch (1969)
  • Forever Laughter (1970)
  • Hattie the Backstage Bat (1970)
  • Penguins, of All People (1971)
  • Inspector Peckit (1972)
  • Flash the Dash (1973)
  • Paper Party (1974)
  • The Seal and the Slick (1974)
  • Will's Quill (1975)
  • Bearymore (1976)
  • Chalk Box Story (1976)
  • A Pocket for Corduroy (1978)
  • Gregory's Shadow (Viking, 2000)[clarification needed]
  • Manuelo the Playing Mantis (2004)
  • Earl the Squirrel (2005)

The two Corduroy books by Freeman (1968 and 1978) were also issued in one volume as All About Corduroy (1998).[15] Other writers and illustrators have extended the series "based on the character created by Don Freeman".[16]

As illustrator only

  • Diedrich Knickerbocker's History of New-York, written by Washington Irving (The Heritage Press, 1940), LCCN 40-31939; original, 1809
  • My Name Is Aram, by William Saroyan (Harcourt, Brace, 1940), collection
  • The Human Comedy, by William Saroyan (Harcourt, 1943)
  • The White Deer, by James Thurber (1945) – "illustrated by the author and Don Freeman" LCCN 45-35191
  • The Saroyan Special: selected short stories, by William Saroyan (Harcourt, 1948)
  • Bill Bergson Lives Dangerously, by Astrid Lindgren (Viking, 1954); original, 1951, Swedish
  • Mike's House, Julia L. Sauer (1954)
  • Ghost Town Treasure, Clyde Robert Bulla (1957)
  • This For That, Ann Nolan Clark (Golden Gate Junior Books, 1966), OCLC 276516
  • Joey's Cat, Robert J. Burch (1969)
  • Edward and the Night Horses, Jacklyn Meek Matthews (Golden Gate Junior Books, 1971), LCCN 78-141156
  • Monster Night at Grandma's House, Richard Peck (1977)
  • Dinosaur, My Darling, Edith Thacher Hurd (Harper & Row, 1978)
  • The Day Is Waiting, Linda Z. Knab (Viking, 1980)

References

  1. ^ "Don Freeman artwork collected by M. Lee Stone, circa 1940s-1960s". Margaret Herrick Library. Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Retrieved 2 June 2015.
  2. ^ a b c d Bloom, Ken (2004). Broadway: An Encyclopedia. London: Routledge. p. 173. ISBN 0415937043.
  3. ^ Freeman, Don; DePastino, Todd (2014). It Shouldn't Happen (to a Dog). Mineola, NY: Courier Corporation. ISBN 9780486782102.
  4. ^ Duke, Sara (2012). Biographical Sketches of Cartoonists & Illustrators in the Swann Collection of the Library of Congress. Arlington, VA: ComicsDC. p. 116. ISBN 9781304858887.
  5. ^ Anderson, Alissa J., Don Freeman (1908-1978), Anderson Shea Art Appraisals
  6. ^ "Storymaker - Don Freeman". YouTube. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  7. ^ Rhinehart & Company, Inc, New York, 1949, p. 244-45.
  8. ^ "Don's Lecture - Don Freeman". Donfreeman.info. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  9. ^ "Welcome to the official site about Don Freeman - Don Freeman". Donfreeman.info. Retrieved 2 October 2014.
  10. ^ Leogrande, Ernest (March 30, 1976). "Back when Big Apple was Ripe". New York Daily News.
  11. ^ Beaufort, John (April 28, 1976). "Artist in Residence of the New York Stage". The Christian Science Monitor.
  12. ^ Beaufort, John (February 24, 1978). "Freeman's Art Caught Stream of Life in Bygone New York". The Christian Science Monitor.
  13. ^ "Goings On About Town", The New Yorker, April 12, 1976, p. 11.
  14. ^ "Goings On About Town", The New Yorker, March 13, 1978, p. 14.
  15. ^ Formats and Editions of All about Corduroy. Worldcat.org. OCLC 40922107.
  16. ^ "Results for 'corduroy don freeman'". Worldcat.org. Retrieved 2 October 2014.

External links

  • Official website  
  • "Oral History interview with Don Freeman, 1965 June 4" in Research Collections of the Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
  • Figureworks.com/20th Century work at www.figureworks.com
  • Don Freeman Biography
  • Documentary film on how Don Freeman created a book on YouTube
  • Don Freeman Autobiography
  • Don Freeman at Library of Congress, with 129 library catalog records
  • Don Freeman artwork collected by M. Lee Stone, circa 1940s-1960s, Margaret Herrick Library, Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences

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For the basketball player see Donnie Freeman This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Don Freeman news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2010 Learn how and when to remove this template message Don Freeman August 11 1908 February 1 1978 was an American painter printmaker cartoonist and an illustrator and writer of children s books He was active from the 1930s to the 1970s 1 and often used Times Square as the backdrop of his memorable works 2 Don FreemanFreeman at work c 1954Born 1908 08 11 August 11 1908San Diego CaliforniaDiedFebruary 1 1978 1978 02 01 aged 69 New York CityNationalityAmericanArea s Cartoonist PencillerNotable worksCorduroydonfreeman wbr info Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 3 Selected works 3 1 As illustrator only 4 References 5 External linksEarly life EditFreeman was born in San Diego California He attended high school in St Louis and moved to New York City in late 1928 He studied at the San Diego School of Fine Arts and after graduation he earned passage to New York by playing the cornet with a ship s orchestra 2 He arrived at the city days before the stock market crash of 1929 and earned money as a dance band musician 3 He enrolled at the Art Students League of New York where he studied graphic design and lithography under John Sloan Harry Wickey and Kathryn E Cherry 4 Career EditFrequent subjects of Freeman s included Broadway theater politics and the circus Freeman was known for carrying a sketchbook with him wherever he went His images depicted New York City and the faces of the people he observed on the streets in the theaters and in the subways They often included images of showgirls Bowery Boys drunks apple sellers window washers and numerous citizens of the city that were down on their luck Freeman was also a jazz musician and the brother of hotel entrepreneur Warren Freeman As Freeman s career progressed he lightened his palette and depicted more upbeat subjects In 1951 he began illustrating children s books His wife Lydia who was also an accomplished artist authored some of the books Freeman illustrated The Freemans eventually moved to Santa Barbara California where they spent the remainder of their lives 5 Don Freeman was first introduced to children s literature when William Saroyan asked him to illustrate several books These include Human Comedy which is considered one of his best known works 2 However his greatest influence came from the artist Honore Daumier Freeman studied many of Daumier s works particularly his caricatures 2 He also owned a large collection of books on the artist Throughout Don Freeman s career he was the writer and illustrator of more than 20 children s books He is best known for his publication of Corduroy later became a 1990s animated direct to video series and a Canadian produced television program was premiered on the PBS s Bookworm Bunch block in 2000 Although he came up with many of his ideas on his own his wife Lydia Freeman contributed greatly to his success indeed she co wrote two books with him Chuggy and the Blue Caboose and Pet of the Met She was very influential on her husband s work as he relied on her for inspiration for his pieces He would read his work aloud to her as well as any children around in order to gain feedback on a particular piece 6 Lydia too became a well known artist in her later life In his autobiography Come One Come All 7 Don humorously admits that of the two she was the better watercolor artist Simplicity is the essence of children s book stories not simple mindedness Don Freeman once stated when speaking to an audience that was interested in writing illustrating and publishing children s books 8 When Freeman lived in New York City during the 1930s 1940s and early 1950s he was a brilliant illustrator of city life in the best traditions of Social Realism His subjects were the actors and actresses of Broadway from Orson Welles to Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne to the man in the street or the charwomen who scrubbed the stage after the actors and the audience went home His cartoons and other illustrations appeared regularly in the New York Herald Tribune The New York Times The Christian Science Monitor and Theater Magazine From 1936 to 1968 Freeman self published Don Freeman s Newsstand It was published as a quarterly magazine for its first decade and then irregularly The tagline read Signs of the Times in Lithographs The periodical documented the daily life in New York City during and after the Great Depression and during the Second World War and featured articles by many well known writers and personalities of the time In later volumes Freeman illustrated life in post war Los Angeles The journal contained original lithographs 9 In 1976 Freeman was recognized by the City of New York for his body of work portraying the city The New York Daily News reported on the Citation from Mayor Abraham D Beame which was presented to Freeman at the opening of a one man retrospective exhibition 10 In a measure of Freeman s national fame The Christian Science Monitor covered the 1976 exhibition as well as a 1978 retrospective both of which showcased Freeman s drawings oils prints and his limited edition self published periodical Don Freeman s Newsstand 11 12 13 14 In 2018 Freeman s work was featured in A City for Corduroy an exhibit at the Museum of the City of New York Selected works Edit clarification needed It Shouldn t Happen Harcourt Brace 1945 212 pp LCCN 45 7182 Come One Come All Rinehart 1949 drawn from memory by Don Freeman LCCN 49 11554 Chuggy and the Blue Caboose written by Don and Lydia Freeman Viking 1951 Pet of the Met Don and Lydia Freeman 1953 Beady Bear 1954 Mop Top 1955 Fly High Fly Low 1957 1958 Caldecott Honor recipient The Night the Lights Went Out 1958 Norman the Doorman 1959 Space Witch 1959 Cyrano the Crow 1960 Come Again Pelican 1961 Ski Pup 1963 Dandelion 1964 The Turtle and the Dove 1964 A Rainbow of My Own 1966 Angelenos Then and Now LA City School District 1966 LCCN 78 301016 The Guard Mouse 1967 Add a line Alphabet 1968 Corduroy 1968 Quiet There s a Canary in the Library 1969 Tilly Witch 1969 Forever Laughter 1970 Hattie the Backstage Bat 1970 Penguins of All People 1971 Inspector Peckit 1972 Flash the Dash 1973 Paper Party 1974 The Seal and the Slick 1974 Will s Quill 1975 Bearymore 1976 Chalk Box Story 1976 A Pocket for Corduroy 1978 Gregory s Shadow Viking 2000 clarification needed Manuelo the Playing Mantis 2004 Earl the Squirrel 2005 The two Corduroy books by Freeman 1968 and 1978 were also issued in one volume as All About Corduroy 1998 15 Other writers and illustrators have extended the series based on the character created by Don Freeman 16 As illustrator only Edit Diedrich Knickerbocker s History of New York written by Washington Irving The Heritage Press 1940 LCCN 40 31939 original 1809 My Name Is Aram by William Saroyan Harcourt Brace 1940 collection The Human Comedy by William Saroyan Harcourt 1943 The White Deer by James Thurber 1945 illustrated by the author and Don Freeman LCCN 45 35191 The Saroyan Special selected short stories by William Saroyan Harcourt 1948 Bill Bergson Lives Dangerously by Astrid Lindgren Viking 1954 original 1951 Swedish Mike s House Julia L Sauer 1954 Ghost Town Treasure Clyde Robert Bulla 1957 This For That Ann Nolan Clark Golden Gate Junior Books 1966 OCLC 276516 Joey s Cat Robert J Burch 1969 Edward and the Night Horses Jacklyn Meek Matthews Golden Gate Junior Books 1971 LCCN 78 141156 Monster Night at Grandma s House Richard Peck 1977 Dinosaur My Darling Edith Thacher Hurd Harper amp Row 1978 The Day Is Waiting Linda Z Knab Viking 1980 References Edit Don Freeman artwork collected by M Lee Stone circa 1940s 1960s Margaret Herrick Library Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved 2 June 2015 a b c d Bloom Ken 2004 Broadway An Encyclopedia London Routledge p 173 ISBN 0415937043 Freeman Don DePastino Todd 2014 It Shouldn t Happen to a Dog Mineola NY Courier Corporation ISBN 9780486782102 Duke Sara 2012 Biographical Sketches of Cartoonists amp Illustrators in the Swann Collection of the Library of Congress Arlington VA ComicsDC p 116 ISBN 9781304858887 Anderson Alissa J Don Freeman 1908 1978 Anderson Shea Art Appraisals Storymaker Don Freeman YouTube Retrieved 2 October 2014 Rhinehart amp Company Inc New York 1949 p 244 45 Don s Lecture Don Freeman Donfreeman info Retrieved 2 October 2014 Welcome to the official site about Don Freeman Don Freeman Donfreeman info Retrieved 2 October 2014 Leogrande Ernest March 30 1976 Back when Big Apple was Ripe New York Daily News Beaufort John April 28 1976 Artist in Residence of the New York Stage The Christian Science Monitor Beaufort John February 24 1978 Freeman s Art Caught Stream of Life in Bygone New York The Christian Science Monitor Goings On About Town The New Yorker April 12 1976 p 11 Goings On About Town The New Yorker March 13 1978 p 14 Formats and Editions of All about Corduroy Worldcat org OCLC 40922107 Results for corduroy don freeman Worldcat org Retrieved 2 October 2014 External links EditOfficial website Oral History interview with Don Freeman 1965 June 4 in Research Collections of the Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution Figureworks com 20th Century work at www figureworks com Don Freeman Biography Documentary film on how Don Freeman created a book on YouTube Don Freeman Autobiography Don Freeman at Library of Congress with 129 library catalog records Don Freeman artwork collected by M Lee Stone circa 1940s 1960s Margaret Herrick Library Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Don Freeman amp oldid 1147742945, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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