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
(Page 3 of 6)
Mytinger was in fact a strikingly lovely strawberry blonde who was known as “Cleveland’s most beautiful woman.” She paid for her art lessons, first in Cleveland and later in New York City, by posing for several distinguished artists, among them illustrator Charles Dana Gibson, who used her as a model for some of his famous Gibson girls. Within a few years of completing school, Mytinger was earning her living painting portraits of local socialites and doing illustrations for Secrets magazine, turning out dewy-eyed beauties to accompany such articles as “When My Dreams Come True.”
In December 1920, she married a young Cleveland doctor, George Stober. According to the standard script, it was time for Mytinger to settle into cozy domesticity. She had other ambitions, however, and they reflected the crosscurrents of social change that characterized her era.
Mytinger was part of a generation of American women who in unprecedented numbers sheared off their hair, shortened their skirts and went to work outside the home. Some went farther: during the Roaring Twenties, books and magazines detailed the exploits of “lady explorers.” At the same time, World War I and a huge influx of immigrants had dramatically increased American awareness of cultural differences. Along with people who regarded those differences as threatening, there were idealists eager to investigate other cultures as a way of questioning their own. During the 1920s, anthropologist Margaret Mead’s Coming of Age in Samoa became a top-seller and Chicago’s Field Museum sent artist Malvina Hoffman around the world to create some 100 life-size sculptures illustrating the world’s “racial types.”
Mytinger read every anthropology text she could find and hoped her talent for portraiture could contribute to social science. She started out, according to one newspaper account, by trying to record “the various Negro types” in Cleveland, then went to Haiti and to Indian reservations in Florida and California. But since none of the peoples she encountered represented the “pure types” she said she wanted to paint, she hit upon the idea of going to the relatively unexplored Solomon Islands and New Guinea.
By then, Mytinger’s marriage appears to have ended, although no record has been found that she and Stober ever divorced. She apparently traveled under the name of Mrs. Caroline Stober, which is perhaps why Warner was the recipient of at least five proposals from lonely South Seas colonials, while Mytinger doesn’t mention receiving any herself. She never married again, but she kept a letter from Stober, undated, that reads in part, “Dear wife and darling girl.... If I have been selfish it has been because I have been unable to suppress my emotions and did not want you away from me.” Some seven years after Mytinger returned from New Guinea, she wrote to her aunt Caroline that she had left her husband “not because he was a disagreeable person, but because...I would never live in the conventional groove of matrimony.”
The long letters Mytinger wrote to friends and family during her travels in the South Seas formed the basis of her two books. Headhunting in the Solomon Islands was published in 1942, just as those islands became suddenly famous as the site of fierce fighting between U.S. and Japanese troops. Mytinger’s true-life adventure story was named a Book-of-the-Month Club selection and spent weeks on the New York Times bestseller list. Her second book, New Guinea Headhunt, came out in 1946, also to excellent reviews. “New Guinea Headhunt,” wrote a critic for the Philadelphia Inquirer, “is top-of-the-best-seller-list reading for the unexpected incidents in it that are the stuff of first-rate narration.” More than half a century later, her two volumes remain captivating reading, thanks to her lively descriptions of the people and places she and Warner encountered. But some of Mytinger’s language, while all too common in her own time, strikes an ugly note today. Her use of terms such as “darky” and “primitive” and her references to children as “pickaninnies” will make modern readers cringe.
Yet she also cast a critical eye on white exploitation of local labor (men were typically indentured for stretches of three years on both coconut and rubber plantations for wages of just $30 a year) and on the affectations required to uphold “white prestige.” Despite white settlers’ complaints about the “primitives’” savagery and stupidity, Mytinger wrote that she found them “polite and clean, and certainly far from stupid. That we could not understand their kind of intelligence did not prove that it did not exist and was not equal to our own in its own way.”
Some of Mytinger’s most challenging encounters came as she and Warner searched for models among peoples who had no concept of portraiture and considerable suspicions about what the two foreigners might be up to. Mytinger describes a “raw swamp woman” named Derivo who had been drafted to serve as housemaid to the Americans during their visit to a remote station along the Fly River. They convinced her to pose in her short grass skirt and palm-leaf hood, virtually the only clothing native women wore in that rainy country. But Derivo became increasingly fidgety and unhappy, and it finally came out, Mytinger wrote, that the woman believed “this painting business was making her legs sick.” No sooner had Derivo stopped posing, the picture unfinished, than she was bitten on the buttocks by a poisonous snake. She recovered, Mytinger reported, but the “episode put us in bad odor in the community, and for a while we could get no other woman to pose for the unfinished figure.”
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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