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 6 of 7)
I always loved hearing my father tell what happened then. In the presence of the busy, skeptical generals, Sargent opened the package. Out fell Thayer’s paint-daubed Norfolk jacket. Pinned across it were scraps of fabric and several of Emma’s stockings. To Thayer, it told the entire story of disruptive patterning. To the elegant Sargent, it was an obscenity—“a bundle of rags!” he fumed to William James, Jr. “I wouldn’t have touched it with my stick!”
Later Thayer received word that his trip had born some sort of fruit: “Our British soldiers are protected by coats of motley hue and stripes of paint as you suggested,” wrote the wife of the British ambassador to the United States. Thayer continued battling to make the British Navy camouflage its ships. In 1916, overstressed and unstrung, he broke down, and in Emma’s words was “sent away from home for a rest.”
The United States entered the war in April 1917, and when a number of artists proposed their own ways to camouflage U.S. warships, Thayer refocused his frenzy. He sent a copy of the concealing coloration book to Franklin Delano Roosevelt, then Assistant Secretary of the Navy, and bombarded him with passionate letters decrying the wrongheaded perversion of his ideas by others. “It will be disastrous if, after all, they dabble in my discoveries,” he wrote. “I beg you, be wise enough as to try accurately, mine, first.”
White, he contended, was the best concealing color for blending with the horizon sky. Dark superstructures, like smokestacks, could be hidden by white canvas screens or a bright wire net. White would be the invisible color at night. One proof, he insisted, was the white iceburg struck by the Titanic. Although some credence would later be given to this theory in a 1963 Navy manual on ship camouflage, Thayer’s ideas in this regard were primarily inspirational rather than practical.
His theories had a more direct effect on Allied uniforms and matériel. A Camouflage Corps was assembled—an unmilitary lot led by sculptor Augustus Saint-Gaudens’ son, Homer. It was for his edification that Thayer had prepared the camouflage demonstration panels that I discovered in Dublin. By 1918 this motley corps contained 285 soldiers—carpenters, iron workers, sign painters. Its 16 officers included sculptors, scenery designers, architects and artists. One was my father, a second lieutenant.
In France a factory applied disruptive, variegated designs to American trucks, sniper suits and observation posts, thereby, as an Army report explained, “destroying identity by breaking up the form of the object.” “Dazzle” camouflage used pieces of material knotted to wire netting, casting shadows that broke up the shapes beneath.
During 1918, Thayer’s frustration over ship camouflage and terror over the war reached a continual, low-grade hysteria. It was too much even for Emma. That winter she fled to her sister in Peekskill, New York. Thayer took refuge in a hotel in Boston, then took himself to a sanatorium. From there he wrote Emma, “I lacked you to jeer me out of suicide and I got into a panic.”
In early 1919 they were together again. But by March, Emma needed another rest in Peekskill, and again during the winter of 1920-21. Despite her absences, Thayer settled down, cared for by his daughter Gladys and his devoted assistants. Late that winter he began a picture that combined his two most cherished themes: an “angel” posed open-armed in front of Mount Monadnock (left). In May he had a series of strokes. The last one, on May 29, 1921, killed him. On hearing of Thayer’s death, John Singer Sargent said, “Too bad he’s gone. He was the best of them.”
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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