A Gibson Girl in New Guinea
Two Seattle women have retraced the intrepid travels of model and portrait artist Caroline Mytinger, who journeyed to the South Sea islands in the 1920s to capture "vanishing primitives" on canvas
- By Tessa DeCarlo
- Photographs by Michele Westmorland and Karen Huntt
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2006, Subscribe
In the 1920s, New Guinea and the Solomon Islands were among the world’s last wild places. Largely unmapped and inhabited by headhunters and cannibals, the jungle isles of the Coral Sea captured the popular imagination as exemplars of the unknown. Dozens of adventurers took up the challenge posed by these remote lands, but perhaps the least likely were two young American women who set out from San Francisco in 1926 armed with little more than art supplies and a ukulele.
Caroline Mytinger, a 29-year-old Gibson girl turned society portraitist, undertook the expedition in hopes, she wrote, of realizing her dream of recording “vanishing primitives” with her paints and brushes. She convinced a long-time friend, Margaret Warner, to accompany her on what became a four-year journey throughout the South Seas.
When the two women finally made it back to the United States in the winter of 1929, they were in poor health, but they came bearing treasure: more than two dozen of Mytinger's vivid oils of the region’s peoples, plus dozens of sketches and photographs. The paintings were exhibited at New York City’s American Museum of Natural History, the Brooklyn Museum and other museums around the country in the 1930s, and during the next decade Mytinger recorded her adventures in two bestselling books illustrated with her artwork.
The recognition Mytinger won proved fleeting, however. She returned to making portraits of society matrons and their children, her books went out of print and her South Seas paintings disappeared into storage. For decades, even well before her death in 1980 at the age of 83, both she and her work had been forgotten by the wider world.
That might still be the case if it weren’t for another pair of adventurous American women. A gift of one of Mytinger’s books in 1994 inspired Seattle-based photographers Michele Westmorland and Karen Huntt to spend several years and raise some $300,000 mounting an expedition to retrace Mytinger’s original South Seas journey.
They also tracked down most of Mytinger’s island paintings, the bulk of which are now housed in the archives of the University of California’s Phoebe A. Hearst Museum of Anthropology in Berkeley. Today these pictures evoke the mystery and allure of two distant worlds—the exotic peoples that Mytinger set out to document and the reckless optimism of 1920s America. That era of flappers, flagpole sitters and barnstormers is perhaps the only time that could have produced an expedition at once so ambitious and so foolhardy.
When Mytinger and Warner sailed through the Golden Gate on a foggy day in March 1926, they were unencumbered, Mytinger later wrote, “by the usual equipment of expeditions: by endowment funds, by precedents, doubts, supplies, an expedition yacht or airplane, by even the blessings or belief of our friends and families, who said we couldn’t do it.” They had only $400—“a reserve fund to ‘ship the bodies home,’” as Mytinger put it—and plans to cover expenses by making portraits of local white colonials. The rest of their time would be spent, she said, “headhunting” for native models.
The young women had already used a similar earn-as-you-go method to travel around the United States, with Mytinger bringing in the money by making portraits while Warner entertained the portrait sitters, playing them songs on her ukulele and, Mytinger recounted, “generally keeping everyone awake in the pose.”
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Comments (5)
Like the above commentators, I happened upon Mytinger's first book and am hooked on her adventurous life with her friend Margaret Warner. Next I want to find out if that movie was ever made? In 2012, both ladies need to be better known and Caroline's art available to the public.
Posted by Tery Grey on June 17,2012 | 07:27 PM
Amazing books! i am just finishing the second one. I discovered the first book in a second hand book store while trying to find books on the South Pacific...I am heading there shortly. The book ended leaving me up in the air, so i googled and found out there was a second book! this was harder to track down, as it is a 'collectible', but i was fortunate to find a copy at the local University, and a student friend to take it out for me! I will be sorry when the tale ends... this article has been wonderful in filling in the gaps, especially re her life after returning home.
Posted by elain genser on October 1,2008 | 10:44 PM
Caroline's book was a 50 cent curiosity that I picked up at a flea market a couple of weeks ago - and I am sorry to say that I finished reading it last night. sigh.... I just hated to leave the "Expitition", Mytinger's incredible wit and attention to descriptive detail - her great and intrepid spirit! - totally inspiring and astoundingly entertaining, not to mention informative! I have been a one person promotional machine for the book these past couple of weeks, and am delighted to discover that there is yet another volume of her (their) journey. I can't believe that I just visited the Phoebe Hurst Museum on Thursday and had no idea that the actual paintings were there! what a delight to find them on this site. Thanks!
Posted by cherilyn naughton on August 11,2008 | 03:13 AM
I picked up 'Headhunting in the Solomon Islands' by chance in a second hand bookshop and I am loving the writing and the insights into another world. Caroline's humour and eye for details are astounding. I wanted to find out more about the author and discovered this site. I'm thrilled to hear that people are preserving her artwork and the memory of her intentions and what she accomplished. Thank you.
Posted by Christine Harris on July 20,2008 | 07:39 PM
Fantastic article. I'm currently half-way through reading Mytinger's book, which unfortunately does not have any illustrations of her work. I decided to check on the 'net to see if there was any information about Mytinger or her work, and came across this article. I also came across this collection of her south seas works, which allowed me to put "pic-a-ture" to her prose. :) http://hearstmuseum.berkeley.edu/exhibitions/mytinger/gallery1.html
Posted by Steve Frampton on May 6,2008 | 08:51 AM