A Painter of Angels Became the Father of Camouflage
Turn-of-the-century artist Abbott Thayer created images of timeless beauty and a radical theory of concealing coloration
- By Richard Meryman
- Smithsonian magazine, April 1999, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
Thayer believed that only an artist could have originated this theory. “The whole basis of picture making,” he said, “consists in contrasting against its background every object in the picture.” He also was a preeminent technician in paint, the acknowledged American master of the color theories developed in Munich and Paris—theories of hue and chroma, of color values and intensities, of how colors enhance or cancel one another when juxtaposed.
Thayer based his concept on his perceptions of the ways in which nature “obliterates” contrast. One is by blending. The colorations of birds, mammals, insects and reptiles, he said, mimic the creatures’ environments. The second is by disruption. Strong arbitrary patterns of color flatten contours and break up outlines, so denizens either disappear or look to be something other than what they are.
Contours are further confused, Thayer maintained, by the flattening effect of what he termed “countershading”: the upper areas of animals tend to be darker than their shadowed undersides. Thus the overall tone is equalized. “Animals are painted by Nature darkest on those parts which tend to be most lighted by the sky’s light, and vice versa,” wrote Thayer. “The result is that their gradation of light-and-shade, by which opaque solid objects manifest themselves to the eye, is effaced at every point, and the spectator seems to see right through the space really occupied by an opaque animal.”
To demonstrate the effects of countershading, he made small painted birds. One rainy day in 1896 he led Frank Chapman, a curator at the American Museum of Natural History in New York, to a construction site. At a distance of 20 feet, he asked how many model birds Chapman saw in the mud. “Two,” Chapman said. They advanced closer. Still two. Standing practically on top of the models, Chapman discovered four. The first two were entirely earth brown. The “invisible” two were countershaded, with their upper halves painted brown and their lower halves painted pure white.
Thayer held demonstrations of his theory throughout the East. But while many prominent zoologists were receptive to his ideas, numerous other scientists acrimoniously attacked him. They argued correctly that conspicuous coloring was also designed to warn off a predator or attract a perspective mate. In particular, they resented Thayer’s insistence that his theory be accepted all or nothing—like Holy Scripture.
His most famous detractor was big-game-hunting Teddy Roosevelt, who publicly scoffed at Thayer’s thesis that the blue jay is colored so as to disappear against the blue shadows of winter snows. What about summer? Roosevelt asked. From his own experience, he knew that zebras and giraffes were clearly visible in the veld from miles away. “If you...sincerely desire to get at the truth,” wrote Roosevelt in a letter, “you would realize that your position is literally nonsensical.” Thayer’s law of obliterative countershading did not recieve official acceptance until 1940, when a prominent British naturalist, Hugh B. Cott, published Adaptive Coloration in Animals.
Although concealing coloration, countershading and camouflage are now axiomatically understood, at the end of the 19th century it probably took an eccentric fanatic like Thayer—a freethinker antagonistic to all conventions, a man eminent in a separate field—to break with the rigid mind-set of the naturalist establishment.
Born in 1849, Thayer grew up in Keene, New Hampshire. At age 6, the future artist was already “bird crazy,” as he put it—already collecting skins. Attending a prep school in Boston, he studied with an animal painter and had begun selling paintings of birds and animals when at 19 he arrived at the National Academy of Design in New York.
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Comments (3)
I just saw a documentary on this artist and I was intrigued. Your article is wonderful and many of the paintings that you show were also in the documentary.
Mr. Thayer went back and forth with President Roosevelt regarding his (Thayer's) theory on what was finally accepted and saves and has saved so many of our soldiers.
The idea of breaking up color as a painter to take flat images and make them round and/or formed as dimensional is the norm for us artists but what a mind for him to decide to go forth with the idea of flattening images by the same breaking of colors but with the opposite enhancements.
When he painted portraits he would usually do them almost full length getting as much as $10,000 for each one but it took him years to finish them because as many artists, he felt they were never quite finished.
His work with camouflage is an amazing endeavor and one that should be noted more commonly to the masses. If I were able to leave such a legacy behind, it would be a certain step to heaven.
Thank you for publishing this article. Many of us have enjoyed it.
Posted by Madeline on December 29,2010 | 02:16 PM
If you look in the sidebar, there are a handful of his paintings collected in the Photo Gallery. Perhaps it was camouflaged from your view. ;)
Posted by Aaron A Aaronson on December 1,2009 | 06:33 AM
I find it amazing that this article, which waxed so eloquently about this artist, was devoid of pictures of his art. One would ASSUME and EXPECT that an article about art would include ARTWORK! I have found other articles at your website that also avoid using pictures to enhance the printed word. Such a pity. s.rosenberger
Posted by s. rosenberger on March 16,2009 | 07:08 PM