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 4 of 7)
The Dublin house had been given to the Thayer family by Mary Amory Greene. A direct descendent of the painter John Singleton Copley, Greene had been one of Thayer’s students. She made herself Thayer’s helper, handling correspondence, collecting fees—and writing substantial checks. She was one of several genteel, affluent, single females delighted to dedicate themselves to the artist. He once explained, “A creative genius uses all his companions...passing to each some rope or something to handle at his fire, i.e. his painting or his poem.”
Another savior was Miss Emmeline “Emma” Beach. A tiny sprite of a woman with reddish-gold hair, she was gentle, understanding, selfless, but also efficient, effectual, and moneyed. Her father owned the New York Sun. Kate was as disorganized as her husband, so both embraced Emma’s friendship. She cheerfully became the Thayer family factotum, struggling to bring order to the chaos.
In 1888 Kate’s mind folded into melancholia and she entered a sanatorium. Alone with the three children, blaming himself for causing Kate’s “dark state,” Thayer turned more and more to Emma. He wrote her wooing, confiding letters, calling her his “Dear fairy godmother” and imploring her to come for extended visits. When Kate died of a lung infection in 1891 in the sanatorium, Thayer proposed to Emma by mail, including the plea that Kate had wished her to care for the children. They were married four months after Kate’s death, and it was with Emma that Thayer settled year-round in Dublin. Now it fell to her to keep the fragile artist glued together.
This was a considerable challenge. His life was blighted by what he called “the Abbott pendulum.” There were highs of blissful “all-wellity” when he reveled in “such tranquility, such purity of nature and such dreams of painting.” At these times he was his essential self—a man of ingratiating charm and grace and generosity. But then depressions set in. “My sight turns inward,” he wrote, “and I have such a state of sick disgust at myself....”
He suffered from “oceans of hypochondria,” which he blamed on his mother, and from an “irritability” he claimed to inherit from his father. Harassed by sleeplessness, exhaustion and anxiety, by petty illnesses, bad eyes and headaches, he kept his state of health, excellent or terrible, constantly in the foreground.
He was convinced that fresh mountain air was the best medicine for everyone, and the entire family slept under bearskin rugs in outdoor lean-tos—even in 30-below weather. In the main house, windows were kept open winter and summer. The place had never been winterized, and what heat there was came from fireplaces and small wood-burning stoves. Illumination was provided by kerosene lamps and candles. Until a water tower fed by a windmill was built, the only plumbing was a hand pump in the kitchen. A privy stood behind the house. But there was always the luxury of a cook and house maids, one of whom, Bessie Price, Thayer used as a model.
In 1887 Thayer found the leitmotif for his most important painting. Defining art as “a no-man’s land of immortal beauty where every step leads to God,” the forefather of today’s raucous camouflage painted his 11-year-old daughter Mary as the personification of virginal, spiritual beauty, giving her a pair of wings and calling the canvas Angel. This was the first in a gallery of chaste, lovely young women, usually winged, but human nevertheless. Although Thayer sometimes added halos, these were not paintings of angels. The wings, he said, were only there to create “an exalted atmosphere”—to make the maidens timeless.
For Thayer, formal religion smacked of “hypocrisy and narrowness.” His God was pantheistic. Mount Monadnock, his field station for nature studies, was “a natural cloister.” He painted more than a dozen versions of it, all with a sense of looming mystery and “wild grandeur.”
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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