Sweet Auburn: The Magazine of the Friends of Mount Auburn Mount Auburn as a Mosaic of American Culture | Page 9

Book cover illustrations by Sarah Wyman Whitman, Courtesy of the Department of Rare Books and Special Collections, University of Rochester Library publisher Houghton Mifflin. She began designing stained glass and was asked by one of the premier stained glass designers, John La Farge, to design carpets and stained glass windows for H.H. Richardson’s Trinity Church in Copley Square. Her windows in Harvard’s Memorial Hall are par- ticularly celebrated. Art historian Virginia Raguin, quoted from the Harvard Library Bulletin in the January-February 2010 Harvard Magazine, calls her “Peace and Honor” window, which commemorates soldiers who served in the Civil War, “one of the most successful opalescent designs of its time” and “legendary for its brilliance.” She gave time and funding to diverse educational institu- tions serving groups largely disenfranchised by American society: Tuskegee Institute (for African Americans), Berea College (for the Appalachian poor), and the Harvard Annex (women), which eventually became Radcliffe. Said William James of her death: “She leaves a dreadful vacuum in Bos- ton…and the same world is here—but without her to bear witness.” She designed a number of monuments at Mount Aub urn, including her own. Creator of an American Icon: Charles Dana Gibson (1867-1944), Illustrator and Cartoonist Lot #3629, Halcyon Ave Charles Dana Gibson was born in Roxbury, Mass. Even as a young man, he was artistically precocious, skilled at fashioning silhouettes of family, friends, and animals. At 13, he became an apprentice to Augustus Left, opposite: Sarah Saint-Gaudens, but didn’t take to sculpture. Wyman Whitman (1842- Instead he enrolled in the Art Students 1904) by Helen Bigelow League in New York, and, in 1885, had a Merriman, Oil on canvas, drawing accepted by the humor magazine, 39.5x28”,Courtesy of Life. On a journey to London, he met Harvard Art Museum, Fogg Art Museum, Har- George du Maurier, the Punch cartoonist vard University Portrait famous for his depictions of tall, stately Collection, Gift of Helen women. Du Maurier was a major influ- Merriman to the Schle- ence on the younger artist’s style. singer Library, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, 1909-10, H770 Photo: Katya Kallsen © President and Fellows of Harvard College Soon, Gibson’s illustrations were being published in Harper’s, Scribner’s, and The Century. He developed the “Gibson Girl,” partially inspired by Irene Langhorne, the aristocratic Virginian he eventually married. The Gibson Girl was no passive society belle or frail neurasthenic but elegant, confident, athletic, and assertive— depicted as swimming, playing tennis, and even at the wheel of the new “horseless carriages” or automobiles. More than a century later, she endures as a symbol of the early 20th century. “My mother was Charles Dana Gibson’s daughter,” says Irene Goodale of Atlanta. “I was about fourteen when my grandfather died, and I knew him well. We used to visit him summers at his house on 700 Acre Island in Maine. I can still see him in his white Adirondack chair under the big copper beech on the lawn. Charles Dana Gibson, Courtesy of the Library of Congress, Grantham Bain Collection “When we were small, he used to scratch our backs while my grandmother played the piano and sang. Whenever we grandchildren wore something he liked, he’d ask us to sit in his studio while he sketched us. So Charles Dana Gibson’s iconic we’d be inside for a couple of Gibson Girl hours while everyone else was outside, playing. We soon learned not to wear anything he liked so we wouldn’t get stuck indoors, posing. “My grandfather taught all of us to sail, and while we were sailing he’d drop his hat or something else into the drink so we had to change course and go back to get it. Eventually we realized he was doing this on purpose so we would learn how to turn a sailboat. He also loved working with his hands; he built his grandchildren a playhouse and a little sort of castle out of bricks and stone at the house in Maine.” Spring 2010 | 7