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Garth Williams

Garth Montgomery Williams (April 16, 1912 – May 8, 1996) was an American artist who came to prominence in the American postwar era as an illustrator of children's books. Many of the books he illustrated have become classics of American children's literature.[1]

Garth Williams
An illustration from Charlotte's Web showing Williams' energetic line, his penchant for detail, emotion and action, as well as his use of texture and shading.
BornApril 16, 1912
New York City, U.S.
DiedMay 8, 1996 (aged 84)
Marfil near Guanajuato, Mexico
EducationWestminster School of Art, Royal College of Art, British School at Rome
Known forIllustrating children's books
Notable workIllustrations for Charlotte's Web and Stuart Little by E.B. White; Illustrations for The Cricket in Times Square by George Selden; illustrations for the Little House series by Laura Ingalls Wilder
StyleLine drawing
AwardsBritish Prix de Rome

In Stuart Little, Charlotte's Web, and in the Little House series of books of Laura Ingalls Wilder, Williams['s] drawings have become inseparable from how we think of those stories. In that respect  ... Williams['s] work belongs in the same class as Sir John Tenniel's drawings for Alice in Wonderland, or Ernest Shepard's illustrations for Winnie the Pooh.[2]

His friendly, fuzzy baby animals populated a dozen Little Golden Books.

Mel Gussow in The New York Times wrote, "He believed that books 'given, or read, to children can have a profound influence!' For that reason, he said, he used his illustrations to try to 'awaken something of importance  ... humor, responsibility, respect for others, interest in the world at large!'"[3]

Early life Edit

Born in New York City in 1912, Williams's father was a cartoonist for Punch and his mother was a landscape painter. He described them by saying, "Everybody in my home was always either painting or drawing."[3] He grew up on farms in New Jersey and Canada until the family relocated to the United Kingdom in 1922, where his parents were from.

Williams studied architecture there, and worked for a time as an architect's assistant. When the Great Depression came, he made up his mind to be an artist instead of an architect. He began his studies at Westminster School of Art in 1929 and, in 1931, was awarded a four-year scholarship to the Royal College of Art where he created a sculpture that was awarded the British Prix de Rome. He continued his education at the British School at Rome in Germany and Italy, until the outbreak of World War II in Europe.

In London, he volunteered with the British Red Cross Civilian Defense ambulances, and helped collect the dead and injured from the streets. After a bomb blast vaporized a friend who had been walking next to him, he sent his wife and daughter to Canada, and reunited with them in New York in 1942.[4]

Career Edit

 
An undated photo of Garth Williams.

In the United States, Williams worked making lenses at a war plant, applied for work as a camouflage artist, contributed war-effort posters to the British-American Art Center in New York, and brought his portfolio around to the major publishing houses. He drew for The New Yorker for a mutually unfulfilling period of time. Then, in 1945, he received his first commission as an illustrator, from editor Ursula Nordstrom of Harper's Department of Books for Boys and Girls. The story is that Nordstrom "told him she was expecting a manuscript that he might illustrate. By coincidence, when the manuscript arrived the author had pinned a note to it: 'Try Garth Williams'. The author was E. B. White; the book was Stuart Little."[3] The Whites had wanted Robert Lawson to work on the project, but had burned through eight illustrators. The book became a success with adults as well as children. Williams later said that seeing grownups on buses and trains reading Stuart Little persuaded him to continue as a freelance illustrator.[5]

Soon after, he began collaborating with Margaret Wise Brown with The Little Fur Family, Harper's answer to Simon & Schuster's Pat the Bunny. Nordstrom knew that the book would be a success when a mother wrote to tell her that her little boy had held open his copy at the dinner table, and tried to feed it his supper.[5] In all, Williams illustrated eleven of Brown's books.

In 1951 he illustrated Charlotte's Web (1952); his eldest child Fiona, who was a toddler when the family escaped the Blitz, was his model for Fern Arable.[3]

In the latter part of his life, Williams lived primarily in Marfil, a small town west of Guanajuato, Mexico. He was part of a colony of expatriates who built or rebuilt homes in the ruins of the silver mines of colonial Mexico. At 81, he estimated that he had illustrated 97 books.[4]

Little House illustrations (1953) Edit

Williams received the commission to illustrate the new Little House edition in about 1947. To know the worlds of Laura's childhood, Williams, who had never been west of the Hudson River, traveled the American Midwest to the places the Ingalls family had lived 70 years before, photographing and sketching landscapes, trees, birds and wildlife, buildings and towns.

The trip culminated in a search along the riverbank along Plum Creek where the family had once built their dugout home. Williams writes, in his 1953 account "I did not expect to find the house, but I felt certain that it would have left an indentation in the bank. A light rain did not help my search, and I was about to give up when ahead of me I saw exactly what I was looking for, a hollow in the east bank of Plum Creek. I felt very well rewarded, for the scene fitted Mrs Wilder's description perfectly...." [He] wanted to  ... be able to see the house on Plum Creek  ... as Laura would have done, as a happy, flower bedecked refuge from the elements, with the music of the nearby stream. Which is how he drew it.[2]

Ursula Nordstrom's initial plan was for Williams to produce eight oil paintings for each book, sixty-four in all. This proved to be not cost-efficient. Williams illustrated the Little House books with a simple pencil, charcoal, and ink. Much of his work was accomplished in Italy.[4]

Williams later illustrated the first edition of The First Four Years (1971), which is commonly considered the last of nine books in the Little House series.

The Rabbits' Wedding controversy (1958) Edit

In 1958, Garth Williams wrote and illustrated a picture book that caused a small uproar: The Rabbits' Wedding. Aimed at children aged 3 to 7, it depicted animals in a moonlit forest attending the wedding of a white rabbit to a black rabbit. In 1959, Alabama Senator E. O. Eddins and Alabama State Library Agency director Emily Wheelock Reed took the lead in a controversy over the book.[6] Senator Eddins, with the support of the White Citizens' Council and other segregationists, demanded that it be removed from all Alabama libraries because of its perceived themes of racial integration and interracial marriage.[7] Reed reviewed the book and, finding no objectionable content, determined it was her ethical duty to defend the book against an outright ban. A battle ensued between Reed and her supporters, and the segregationist faction in the legislature. In the end, the book was not banned outright, but rather placed on special reserve shelves in the state library agency-run facilities. Libraries that had purchased their own copies were not required to make this change.[8][9]

About the controversy, Williams stated, "I was completely unaware that animals with white fur, such as white polar bears and white dogs and white rabbits, were considered blood relations of white beings. I was only aware that a white horse next to a black horse looks very picturesque." Williams said his story was not written for adults, who "will not understand it, because it is only about a soft furry love and has no hidden message of hate".[10]

Personal life Edit

Williams was married four times. The first three marriages ended in divorce; he remained in his fourth marriage until his death. He had children from each marriage, totaling five daughters and one son.

He met his first two wives while living in England. His first wife was Gunda Lambton (née von Davidson) a German artist and writer with whom he had two daughters. His second wife Dorothea (née Dessauer), formerly his children's nanny, was an Austrian Jewish artist whose affluent parents died in the Holocaust. He and Dorothea also had two daughters. A few years after their eventual divorce she died of a drug overdose.[11][12]

Williams met his third and fourth wives while living in Mexico. Four months after his second divorce in 1962, he married Alicia Rayas, his nineteen-year-old Mexican housekeeper. Several years later they had a son. His last marriage was to Leticia Vargas Arredondo, from a prominent family in Guanajuato. He and Leticia had a daughter together when he was sixty-six years old. His youngest daughter was 17 when Williams died.[11][13]

At 84 Williams died at his home in Marfil, and was buried in Aspen, Colorado. He had five daughters: Fiona and Bettina from his first marriage; Jessica and Estyn from his second; Dilys from his fourth; and a son, Dylan, from his third marriage.

For the last 40 years of his life Williams divided most of his time between a restored hacienda in Guanajuato and in his home in San Antonio, Texas.[13][11]

Techniques Edit

In a 1999 interview, Williams described his approach to illustrating stories by other writers. His initial reading of the material usually would suggest thirty or forty potential pictures. "To compose the pictures is very hard  ... I look for all the action in the story; then I arrange forms and color. I always try to imagine what the author is seeing. Of course, I have to narrow down my ideas to the number of drawings I'm allowed, which might be as few as ten per book. I make a list of illustrations. When I see a picture, I write down the idea and a page number while I read the manuscript."[4]

Williams drew few straight lines. He used charcoal and graphite pencils, from fine to very soft, to illustrate the Little House books. The "youngest" book in the series, Little House in the Big Woods, is nearly lamplit in its coziness, almost an echo of the small-animal sensibilities of The Fur Family or his deeply colored Little Golden Books. He used pen and ink for The Cricket in Times Square, the Rescuers books, Charlotte's Web, and Stuart Little. The Giant Golden Book of Elves and Fairies, a 1951 anthology, is noteworthy for Williams' extensive use of colored pencil. In the Golden Books and Little Golden Books, he favored oil pastels, ink washes, and watercolor. The Rabbits' Wedding (1958), which employed a limited palette of only a few delicate colors, contained some of the best-reproduced examples of his ability to convey hair, hide, grass, and fur textures.

Published books Edit

As writer and illustrator Edit

  • (1946). The Chicken Book: A Traditional Rhyme. New York: Delacorte. ISBN 0-440-40600-5.
  • (1951). Adventures of Benjamin Pink. New York: Harper.
  • (1952). Baby Animals. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • (1953). Baby Farm Animals. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • (1954). The Golden Animal ABC. New York: Simon & Schuster (republished as Animal ABC, Golden Press (1957); My Big Animal ABC, Golden Pleasure Books, London (1957); Bunnies' ABC, Western Publishing, Racine, Wisconsin (1985)).
  • (1955). Baby's First Book. New York: Simon & Schuster.
  • (1958). The Rabbits' Wedding. New York: Harper. ISBN 0-06-026495-0.
  • (1986). Self-Portrait. Reading, Mass.: Addison-Wesley Publishing Co. ISBN 0-201-08314-0.

With other writers Edit

  • Andrieux, Raymond (1945). Tux'n'Tails. New York: Vanguard.
  • Baylor, Byrd. (1963). Amigo.
  • Brown, Margaret Wise. (1946). Little Fur Family. New York: Harper.
  • Brown, Margaret Wise (1948). Wait 'til the Moon Is Full.
  • Brown, Margaret Wise (1951). Fox Eyes.
  • Brown, Margaret Wise (1952). Mister Dog: The Dog Who Belonged to Himself.
  • Brown, Margaret Wise (1953). The Sailor Dog.
  • Brown, Margaret Wise (1954). The Friendly Book.
  • Brown, Margaret Wise (1956). Home for a Bunny.
  • Brown, Margaret Wise (1956, Harper). Three Little Animals.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy. (1949). Tiny Nonsense Stories. New York: Simon and Schuster.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). Happy Valentine.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). Mrs. Sheep's Little Lamb.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). The Two Snow Bulls.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). Roger Mouse's Wish.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). The Wonderful Silly Picnic.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). The Naughty Little Guest.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). Uncle Quack.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). April Fool!
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). The Cowboy Kitten.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1949). The Easter Bunny.
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1948). Shame on You, Baby Whale!
  • Kunhardt, Dorothy (1948). Good Housekeeping collaborations
  • Carlson, Natalie Savage. The Family Under the Bridge.
  • Carlson, Natalie Savage. A Happy Orpheline.
  • Carlson, Natalie Savage (1959). A Brother for the Orphelines.
  • Hoban, Russell Bedtime for Frances.
  • Jarrell, Randall (1964) The Gingerbread Rabbit.
  • Le Gallienne, Eva (1949) Flossie and Bossie
  • Leader, Pauline 1946 'A Room for the Night' Vanguard.
  • Lindquist, Jennie D (1955) The Golden Name Day.
  • Lindquist, Jennie D (1959). The Little Silver House.
  • Minarik, Else H. (1963). The Little Giant Girl and the Elf Boy.
  • Prelutsky, Jack Ride a Purple Pelican.
  • Prelutsky, Jack (1990). Beneath a Blue Umbrella.
  • Moore, Lilian (1957). My First Counting Book.
  • Norton, Miriam (1954). The Kitten Who Thought He Was a Mouse.
  • Runyon, Damon (1946). In Our Town: Twenty Seven Slices of Life. New York: Creative Age Press.
  • Selden, George New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux.
  • Selden, George (1960). The Cricket in Times Square.
  • Selden, George (1981). Chester Cricket's Pigeon Ride.
  • Selden, George (1983). Chester Cricket's New Home.
  • Selden, George (1986). Harry Kitten and Tucker Mouse.
  • Selden, George (1974). Harry Cat's Pet Puppy.
  • Selden, George (1969). Tucker's Countryside.
  • Selden, George (1987). The Old Meadow.
  • Sharp, Margery. The Rescuers: A Fantasy.
  • Sharp, Margery. Miss Bianca.
  • Sharp, Margery (1966). Miss Bianca in the Salt Mines.
  • Sharp, Margery (1963). The Turret.
  • Stoltz, Mary. Emmet's Pig.
  • Stoltz, Mary. King Emmett the Second.
  • Wahl, Jan (1968). Push Kitty.
  • Werner, Jane (ed.) (1950). The Tall Book of Make-Believe.
  • Werner, Jane (ed.) (1951). The Giant Golden Book of Elves and Fairies.
  • White, E. B. (1945). Stuart Little.
  • White, E. B. (1952). Charlotte's Web.
  • Wilder, Laura Ingalls (1953). The first eight Little House books. New York: Harper.
  • Wilder, Laura Ingalls, with a foreword by Roger McBride (1971). The First Four Years. New York: Harper & Row.
  • Zolotow, Charlotte (1963). Over and Over.
  • Zolotow, Charlotte. Do You Know What I'd Do?
  • Zolotow, Charlotte (1963). The Sky Was Blue.

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ "Garth Montgomery Williams". Pinterest.
  2. ^ a b Campbell, Gordon (July 7, 2009). "Classics: The Rabbits Wedding by Garth Williams". Werewolf. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
  3. ^ a b c d Gussow, Mel (May 10, 1996). "Garth Williams, Book Illustrator, Dies at 84". The New York Times. Retrieved May 12, 2011.
  4. ^ a b c d Anderson, William (March 1, 1993). "Garth Williams after eighty". The Horn Book Magazine. Retrieved May 12, 2011.[dead link]
  5. ^ a b Marcus, Leonard S. (2008). Minders of Make-Believe. New York: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 0-395-67407-7.
  6. ^ "Emily W. Reed, 89, Librarian in '59 Alabama Racial Dispute" [Obituary]. (May 29, 2000). The New York Times
  7. ^ Selby, M. (2012). "Librarians as Leaders". Feliciter, 58 (5), 37
  8. ^ Graham, P. (2002). A right to read: segregation and civil rights in Alabama's public libraries, 1900–1965 (pp. 102–112). Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 2002.
  9. ^ Sollors, W. (1996). Neither black nor white yet both: thematic explorations of interracial literature. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 21.
  10. ^ "'Racial Rabbits' Irk Alabamans". Los Angeles Evening Mirror News. May 22, 1959. Retrieved May 12, 2011.[dead link]
  11. ^ a b c Wallace, Elizabeth K. and James D. (2016). Garth Williams, American Illustrator: A Life. Beaufort Books. ISBN 978-0825307959.
  12. ^ "Dorothea Amalia Dessauer 1924-1965 - Ancestry®". www.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2022-07-14.
  13. ^ a b Gussow, Mel (1996-05-10). "Garth Williams, Book Illustrator, Dies at 84". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2022-07-13.

Further reading Edit

  • Wheeler, Jill C. (2005). Garth Williams. Children's Illustrators. Edina, Minnesota: Abdo Publishing. ISBN 978-1-59197-723-0. A biography for children.
  • Olendorf, Donna, ed. (1991). "Garth M. Williams". Something about the Author. Vol. 66. Detroit, Michigan: Gale. pp. 228–235. ISBN 978-0-8103-2276-9.
  • Marcus, Leonard S. Marcus (February 23, 1990). "Garth Williams: An Interview". Publishers Weekly. Vol. 237, no. 8. p. 201. Retrieved April 10, 2021.
  • In 1986, the Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society of De Smet, South Dakota created a video, Back after 39 Years: Garth Williams Re-visits De Smet, S.D. This is a taped lecture in which Williams describes his work on the Little House books.[citation needed]

External links Edit

  • LIFE. July 2, 1971. "A Fine Way Back to Our Prairie Past". This article reproduces the original watercolor-pencil illustrations for the covers of three of the Wilder books.
  • My grandfather, illustrator Garth Williams

garth, williams, garth, montgomery, williams, april, 1912, 1996, american, artist, came, prominence, american, postwar, illustrator, children, books, many, books, illustrated, have, become, classics, american, children, literature, illustration, from, charlott. Garth Montgomery Williams April 16 1912 May 8 1996 was an American artist who came to prominence in the American postwar era as an illustrator of children s books Many of the books he illustrated have become classics of American children s literature 1 Garth WilliamsAn illustration from Charlotte s Web showing Williams energetic line his penchant for detail emotion and action as well as his use of texture and shading BornApril 16 1912New York City U S DiedMay 8 1996 aged 84 Marfil near Guanajuato MexicoEducationWestminster School of Art Royal College of Art British School at RomeKnown forIllustrating children s booksNotable workIllustrations for Charlotte s Web and Stuart Little by E B White Illustrations for The Cricket in Times Square by George Selden illustrations for the Little House series by Laura Ingalls WilderStyleLine drawingAwardsBritish Prix de Rome In Stuart Little Charlotte s Web and in the Little House series of books of Laura Ingalls Wilder Williams s drawings have become inseparable from how we think of those stories In that respect Williams s work belongs in the same class as Sir John Tenniel s drawings for Alice in Wonderland or Ernest Shepard s illustrations for Winnie the Pooh 2 His friendly fuzzy baby animals populated a dozen Little Golden Books Mel Gussow in The New York Times wrote He believed that books given or read to children can have a profound influence For that reason he said he used his illustrations to try to awaken something of importance humor responsibility respect for others interest in the world at large 3 Contents 1 Early life 2 Career 2 1 Little House illustrations 1953 2 2 The Rabbits Wedding controversy 1958 3 Personal life 4 Techniques 5 Published books 5 1 As writer and illustrator 5 2 With other writers 6 See also 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksEarly life EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Born in New York City in 1912 Williams s father was a cartoonist for Punch and his mother was a landscape painter He described them by saying Everybody in my home was always either painting or drawing 3 He grew up on farms in New Jersey and Canada until the family relocated to the United Kingdom in 1922 where his parents were from Williams studied architecture there and worked for a time as an architect s assistant When the Great Depression came he made up his mind to be an artist instead of an architect He began his studies at Westminster School of Art in 1929 and in 1931 was awarded a four year scholarship to the Royal College of Art where he created a sculpture that was awarded the British Prix de Rome He continued his education at the British School at Rome in Germany and Italy until the outbreak of World War II in Europe In London he volunteered with the British Red Cross Civilian Defense ambulances and helped collect the dead and injured from the streets After a bomb blast vaporized a friend who had been walking next to him he sent his wife and daughter to Canada and reunited with them in New York in 1942 4 Career EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp An undated photo of Garth Williams In the United States Williams worked making lenses at a war plant applied for work as a camouflage artist contributed war effort posters to the British American Art Center in New York and brought his portfolio around to the major publishing houses He drew for The New Yorker for a mutually unfulfilling period of time Then in 1945 he received his first commission as an illustrator from editor Ursula Nordstrom of Harper s Department of Books for Boys and Girls The story is that Nordstrom told him she was expecting a manuscript that he might illustrate By coincidence when the manuscript arrived the author had pinned a note to it Try Garth Williams The author was E B White the book was Stuart Little 3 The Whites had wanted Robert Lawson to work on the project but had burned through eight illustrators The book became a success with adults as well as children Williams later said that seeing grownups on buses and trains reading Stuart Little persuaded him to continue as a freelance illustrator 5 Soon after he began collaborating with Margaret Wise Brown with The Little Fur Family Harper s answer to Simon amp Schuster s Pat the Bunny Nordstrom knew that the book would be a success when a mother wrote to tell her that her little boy had held open his copy at the dinner table and tried to feed it his supper 5 In all Williams illustrated eleven of Brown s books In 1951 he illustrated Charlotte s Web 1952 his eldest child Fiona who was a toddler when the family escaped the Blitz was his model for Fern Arable 3 In the latter part of his life Williams lived primarily in Marfil a small town west of Guanajuato Mexico He was part of a colony of expatriates who built or rebuilt homes in the ruins of the silver mines of colonial Mexico At 81 he estimated that he had illustrated 97 books 4 Little House illustrations 1953 Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Williams received the commission to illustrate the new Little House edition in about 1947 To know the worlds of Laura s childhood Williams who had never been west of the Hudson River traveled the American Midwest to the places the Ingalls family had lived 70 years before photographing and sketching landscapes trees birds and wildlife buildings and towns The trip culminated in a search along the riverbank along Plum Creek where the family had once built their dugout home Williams writes in his 1953 account I did not expect to find the house but I felt certain that it would have left an indentation in the bank A light rain did not help my search and I was about to give up when ahead of me I saw exactly what I was looking for a hollow in the east bank of Plum Creek I felt very well rewarded for the scene fitted Mrs Wilder s description perfectly He wanted to be able to see the house on Plum Creek as Laura would have done as a happy flower bedecked refuge from the elements with the music of the nearby stream Which is how he drew it 2 Ursula Nordstrom s initial plan was for Williams to produce eight oil paintings for each book sixty four in all This proved to be not cost efficient Williams illustrated the Little House books with a simple pencil charcoal and ink Much of his work was accomplished in Italy 4 Williams later illustrated the first edition of The First Four Years 1971 which is commonly considered the last of nine books in the Little House series The Rabbits Wedding controversy 1958 Edit This section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In 1958 Garth Williams wrote and illustrated a picture book that caused a small uproar The Rabbits Wedding Aimed at children aged 3 to 7 it depicted animals in a moonlit forest attending the wedding of a white rabbit to a black rabbit In 1959 Alabama Senator E O Eddins and Alabama State Library Agency director Emily Wheelock Reed took the lead in a controversy over the book 6 Senator Eddins with the support of the White Citizens Council and other segregationists demanded that it be removed from all Alabama libraries because of its perceived themes of racial integration and interracial marriage 7 Reed reviewed the book and finding no objectionable content determined it was her ethical duty to defend the book against an outright ban A battle ensued between Reed and her supporters and the segregationist faction in the legislature In the end the book was not banned outright but rather placed on special reserve shelves in the state library agency run facilities Libraries that had purchased their own copies were not required to make this change 8 9 About the controversy Williams stated I was completely unaware that animals with white fur such as white polar bears and white dogs and white rabbits were considered blood relations of white beings I was only aware that a white horse next to a black horse looks very picturesque Williams said his story was not written for adults who will not understand it because it is only about a soft furry love and has no hidden message of hate 10 Personal life EditWilliams was married four times The first three marriages ended in divorce he remained in his fourth marriage until his death He had children from each marriage totaling five daughters and one son He met his first two wives while living in England His first wife was Gunda Lambton nee von Davidson a German artist and writer with whom he had two daughters His second wife Dorothea nee Dessauer formerly his children s nanny was an Austrian Jewish artist whose affluent parents died in the Holocaust He and Dorothea also had two daughters A few years after their eventual divorce she died of a drug overdose 11 12 Williams met his third and fourth wives while living in Mexico Four months after his second divorce in 1962 he married Alicia Rayas his nineteen year old Mexican housekeeper Several years later they had a son His last marriage was to Leticia Vargas Arredondo from a prominent family in Guanajuato He and Leticia had a daughter together when he was sixty six years old His youngest daughter was 17 when Williams died 11 13 At 84 Williams died at his home in Marfil and was buried in Aspen Colorado He had five daughters Fiona and Bettina from his first marriage Jessica and Estyn from his second Dilys from his fourth and a son Dylan from his third marriage For the last 40 years of his life Williams divided most of his time between a restored hacienda in Guanajuato and in his home in San Antonio Texas 13 11 Techniques EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed January 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message In a 1999 interview Williams described his approach to illustrating stories by other writers His initial reading of the material usually would suggest thirty or forty potential pictures To compose the pictures is very hard I look for all the action in the story then I arrange forms and color I always try to imagine what the author is seeing Of course I have to narrow down my ideas to the number of drawings I m allowed which might be as few as ten per book I make a list of illustrations When I see a picture I write down the idea and a page number while I read the manuscript 4 Williams drew few straight lines He used charcoal and graphite pencils from fine to very soft to illustrate the Little House books The youngest book in the series Little House in the Big Woods is nearly lamplit in its coziness almost an echo of the small animal sensibilities of The Fur Family or his deeply colored Little Golden Books He used pen and ink for The Cricket in Times Square the Rescuers books Charlotte s Web and Stuart Little The Giant Golden Book of Elves and Fairies a 1951 anthology is noteworthy for Williams extensive use of colored pencil In the Golden Books and Little Golden Books he favored oil pastels ink washes and watercolor The Rabbits Wedding 1958 which employed a limited palette of only a few delicate colors contained some of the best reproduced examples of his ability to convey hair hide grass and fur textures Published books EditAs writer and illustrator Edit 1946 The Chicken Book A Traditional Rhyme New York Delacorte ISBN 0 440 40600 5 1951 Adventures of Benjamin Pink New York Harper 1952 Baby Animals New York Simon amp Schuster 1953 Baby Farm Animals New York Simon amp Schuster 1954 The Golden Animal ABC New York Simon amp Schuster republished as Animal ABC Golden Press 1957 My Big Animal ABC Golden Pleasure Books London 1957 Bunnies ABC Western Publishing Racine Wisconsin 1985 1955 Baby s First Book New York Simon amp Schuster 1958 The Rabbits Wedding New York Harper ISBN 0 06 026495 0 1986 Self Portrait Reading Mass Addison Wesley Publishing Co ISBN 0 201 08314 0 With other writers Edit Andrieux Raymond 1945 Tux n Tails New York Vanguard Baylor Byrd 1963 Amigo Brown Margaret Wise 1946 Little Fur Family New York Harper Brown Margaret Wise 1948 Wait til the Moon Is Full Brown Margaret Wise 1951 Fox Eyes Brown Margaret Wise 1952 Mister Dog The Dog Who Belonged to Himself Brown Margaret Wise 1953 The Sailor Dog Brown Margaret Wise 1954 The Friendly Book Brown Margaret Wise 1956 Home for a Bunny Brown Margaret Wise 1956 Harper Three Little Animals Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 Tiny Nonsense Stories New York Simon and Schuster Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 Happy Valentine Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 Mrs Sheep s Little Lamb Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 The Two Snow Bulls Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 Roger Mouse s Wish Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 The Wonderful Silly Picnic Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 The Naughty Little Guest Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 Uncle Quack Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 April Fool Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 The Cowboy Kitten Kunhardt Dorothy 1949 The Easter Bunny Kunhardt Dorothy 1948 Shame on You Baby Whale Kunhardt Dorothy 1948 Good Housekeeping collaborations Carlson Natalie Savage The Family Under the Bridge Carlson Natalie Savage A Happy Orpheline Carlson Natalie Savage 1959 A Brother for the Orphelines Hoban Russell Bedtime for Frances Jarrell Randall 1964 The Gingerbread Rabbit Le Gallienne Eva 1949 Flossie and Bossie Leader Pauline 1946 A Room for the Night Vanguard Lindquist Jennie D 1955 The Golden Name Day Lindquist Jennie D 1959 The Little Silver House Minarik Else H 1963 The Little Giant Girl and the Elf Boy Prelutsky Jack Ride a Purple Pelican Prelutsky Jack 1990 Beneath a Blue Umbrella Moore Lilian 1957 My First Counting Book Norton Miriam 1954 The Kitten Who Thought He Was a Mouse Runyon Damon 1946 In Our Town Twenty Seven Slices of Life New York Creative Age Press Selden George New York Farrar Straus amp Giroux Selden George 1960 The Cricket in Times Square Selden George 1981 Chester Cricket s Pigeon Ride Selden George 1983 Chester Cricket s New Home Selden George 1986 Harry Kitten and Tucker Mouse Selden George 1974 Harry Cat s Pet Puppy Selden George 1969 Tucker s Countryside Selden George 1987 The Old Meadow Sharp Margery The Rescuers A Fantasy Sharp Margery Miss Bianca Sharp Margery 1966 Miss Bianca in the Salt Mines Sharp Margery 1963 The Turret Stoltz Mary Emmet s Pig Stoltz Mary King Emmett the Second Wahl Jan 1968 Push Kitty Werner Jane ed 1950 The Tall Book of Make Believe Werner Jane ed 1951 The Giant Golden Book of Elves and Fairies White E B 1945 Stuart Little White E B 1952 Charlotte s Web Wilder Laura Ingalls 1953 The first eight Little House books New York Harper Wilder Laura Ingalls with a foreword by Roger McBride 1971 The First Four Years New York Harper amp Row Zolotow Charlotte 1963 Over and Over Zolotow Charlotte Do You Know What I d Do Zolotow Charlotte 1963 The Sky Was Blue See also Edit nbsp Children s literature portalReferences Edit Garth Montgomery Williams Pinterest a b Campbell Gordon July 7 2009 Classics The Rabbits Wedding by Garth Williams Werewolf Retrieved May 12 2011 a b c d Gussow Mel May 10 1996 Garth Williams Book Illustrator Dies at 84 The New York Times Retrieved May 12 2011 a b c d Anderson William March 1 1993 Garth Williams after eighty The Horn Book Magazine Retrieved May 12 2011 dead link a b Marcus Leonard S 2008 Minders of Make Believe New York Houghton Mifflin ISBN 0 395 67407 7 Emily W Reed 89 Librarian in 59 Alabama Racial Dispute Obituary May 29 2000 The New York Times Selby M 2012 Librarians as Leaders Feliciter 58 5 37 Graham P 2002 A right to read segregation and civil rights in Alabama s public libraries 1900 1965 pp 102 112 Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press 2002 Sollors W 1996 Neither black nor white yet both thematic explorations of interracial literature New York Oxford University Press p 21 Racial Rabbits Irk Alabamans Los Angeles Evening Mirror News May 22 1959 Retrieved May 12 2011 dead link a b c Wallace Elizabeth K and James D 2016 Garth Williams American Illustrator A Life Beaufort Books ISBN 978 0825307959 Dorothea Amalia Dessauer 1924 1965 Ancestry www ancestry com Retrieved 2022 07 14 a b Gussow Mel 1996 05 10 Garth Williams Book Illustrator Dies at 84 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2022 07 13 Further reading EditWheeler Jill C 2005 Garth Williams Children s Illustrators Edina Minnesota Abdo Publishing ISBN 978 1 59197 723 0 A biography for children Olendorf Donna ed 1991 Garth M Williams Something about the Author Vol 66 Detroit Michigan Gale pp 228 235 ISBN 978 0 8103 2276 9 Marcus Leonard S Marcus February 23 1990 Garth Williams An Interview Publishers Weekly Vol 237 no 8 p 201 Retrieved April 10 2021 In 1986 the Laura Ingalls Wilder Memorial Society of De Smet South Dakota created a video Back after 39 Years Garth Williams Re visits De Smet S D This is a taped lecture in which Williams describes his work on the Little House books citation needed External links EditIllustrators and Authors Collecting Little Golden Books LIFE July 2 1971 A Fine Way Back to Our Prairie Past This article reproduces the original watercolor pencil illustrations for the covers of three of the Wilder books My grandfather illustrator Garth Williams Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Garth Williams amp oldid 1153666661, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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