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 4 of 6)
The same Fly River station also produced Mytinger’s favorite model, a headhunter named Tauparaupi, whose portrait is on the cover of the artist’s second book (p. 80). He was brought to her as part of a group that had been taken prisoner by the authorities for allegedly beheading and eating 39 members of a neighboring village. Two other sitters were the protagonists in a Papuan tragedy. One painting showed a pretty girl named Ninoa being readied for a ceremonial dance by her mother, who carried the girl’s tiny baby on her back. Another canvas depicted two young men smoking a native pipe. One of the men was the father of Ninoa’s baby, but he refused to marry her and, worse, publicly laughed at her while she was being painted. She left and hanged herself in one of the huts, not out of sorrow but to revenge herself by haunting her disloyal lover. Shortly thereafter, Mytinger wrote, “Ninoa let him have it” when the young man was seriously injured in an accident.
Mytinger often captured details beyond the reach of the era’s black-and-white photography—the colors of a massive feather headdress, the subtleties of full-body tattooing and the bright stripes dyed into the women’s grass skirts. At the same time, her renderings gave full expression to her models’ humanity. But some of Mytinger’s depictions are not entirely sound from an anthropological point of view. For example, while painting a young New Guinea man with elaborate decorative scarring on his back, Mytinger, using pidgin English and sign language, invited him to adorn himself with appropriate items from the local museum. Long after the portrait was completed, she learned that the hat the man had chosen to wear came from a district other than his own and that the pink-and-blue-painted shield he held was actually from New Britain Island. “After that discovery,” Mytinger concluded, “the only thing we could be sure was authentic in the picture was the hide of the boy himself.”
Moreover, Mytinger’s style and training made a certain amount of idealization of her subjects all but inevitable. A surviving photograph of two of Mytinger’s New Guinea subjects, an older man nicknamed Sarli and his younger wife, reveals marked disparities between the woman’s pinched and disheveled appearance in the photo and her painted countenance. (Sadly, both soon died from a strain of influenza carried to their village by the crew of a visiting American freighter.)
After three years in the tropics, Mytinger and Warner were ready for home. But they had only enough money to get to Java, where they lived for almost a year, rebuilding their health while Mytinger repainted her pictures with real oil paints. Finally a job doing illustrations brought in enough money to get them both back to the United States.
Not long after the two women arrived in Manhattan, the city’s American Museum of Natural History exhibited Mytinger’s paintings. “Glowing with rich hues, vigorously and surely modeled,” wrote a critic for the New York Herald Tribune, “these paintings reveal, as no flat black-and-white photographs could, the actual gradations in the color of hair, eyes and skin of the various South Sea Island tribes...and the vividness of their decorations and natural backgrounds.” The pictures next went on display at the Brooklyn Museum and then traveled to the Los Angeles Museum of History, Science, and Art. Newspaper reporters eagerly wrote up the story of Mytinger’s expedition, but the country was deep in an economic depression and no museum offered to buy the pictures. “The paintings are still orphaned at the Los Angeles Museum,” Mytinger wrote to her aunt Caroline in 1932. “Sometime when the finances of the art buying public are restored to normalcy, I may be able to get something for them—but I know it isn’t possible now.”
Mytinger resumed her career as an itinerant portraitist, traveling to Louisiana, Iowa, Ohio, Washington—wherever commissions could be found. Sometimes a local museum showed her South Seas paintings, but by the 1940s she had packed the pictures away. Some of Mytinger’s clients were prominent—members of the Weyerhaeuser timber dynasty, the flour company Pillsburys, novelist Mary Ellen Chase, whose Mytinger portrait still hangs in one of the libraries at Smith College in Massachusetts—but most were not. “I’m not writing and not painting,” Mytinger’s 1932 letter continued, “just pounding out these small drawings for which I charge twenty-five dollars—and being grateful for orders.”
Her financial ambitions were modest. “I like not having much money,” she wrote to her aunt in 1937. “I like the feeling that I charge for my pictures only what I think they are worth and not as much as I could get. It gives me a feeling of great independence and integrity, but it also produces a large amount of inconvenience when I want things that are in the capitalist class—like real estate.” A home of her own, however, came with the publication of her first book in 1942. The following year, she bought a one-bedroom studio in the California coast town of Monterey, a well-known artists’ community. By then she and Warner seem to have gone their separate ways. “Hope you like living alone as much as I do,” Mytinger wrote to a cousin. “I treasure it.” She remained there for the rest of her life.
In her later years Mytinger lived frugally and painted for her own pleasure, traveling occasionally, enjoying her dogs and cats, entertaining friends and tinkering around her house, which was filled with mosaics, handmade furniture and other results of her handiwork. It appears she walked away from her time in the limelight with relief rather than regret. “She hated careerism and galleries and the ego presentation,” says Ina Kozel, a younger artist whom Mytinger befriended. “She definitely was an artist through and through, in her soul and in the way she lived.”
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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