Walter Inglis Anderson
Major Works
- An Alphabet
- Robinson: The Pleasant History of an Unusual
Cat
- The Horn Island Logs of Walter Inglis Anderson (Mississippi
Art Series)
- Birds: An Introductory Essay (Mary Anderson
Pickard, contributor)
- The Magic Carpet and Other Tales by Ellen
Douglas, Walter Anderson (Illustrator)
- On the Gulf (Author and Artist Series)
Elizabeth Spencer, Walter Anderson (Illustrator) Published
1991
A Symphony of Animals by Walter Andersen,
Walter Anderson (Illustrator)
- The Living Dock by Jack Rudloe and Illustrated
by Walter Inglis Anderson, Published 1988, 2003
- Walter Anderson's Illustrations of Epic and Voyage
by Walter Inglis Anderson
- A Symphony of Animals by Walter Andersen,
Walter Anderson (Illustrator)
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Biography of Walter Inglis Anderson
by Chris Jones (SHS)
Walter Inglis Anderson was born on September
29, 1903, in New Orleans to George Walter Anderson and Annette
McConnell Anderson. His father was a grain merchant and
his mother was an artist. (Logs11-12) He was the second of three
brothers, the eldest being Peter and the youngest, Mac. He went
to St. John's School in Manilus, New York, from the ages of
eight to fourteen when his schooling was interrupted by
World War 1. After that he went to Manual Training School
in New Orleans. (Logs 12) He then went on to the
Parson's Institute in New York. He finished his
education at Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. (WAMA) While
he was at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, he won
the Packard Award for winning an animal drawing contest against
the entire student body. (Logs 2) He later won a scholarship
to study abroad and went to France. While he was in France,
he was particularly impressed with the cave paintings, which
noticeably influenced his drawing style.
He
went back to Ocean Springs, Mississippi, to live.
There he met Agnes Grinstead and married her. Together they
had four children: Mary, Billy, Leif, and John. He worked
for his brother Peter at Shearwater pottery. During the
Depression he worked for the WPA painting murals. Then in 1937
he was diagnosed a schizophrenic and spent three years in and
out of hospitals. (WAMA) Every time he was placed in a
mental institution, he devised a plan and escaped.
When he was in Whitfield, he knotted up his bed sheets
and climbed out, leaving drawings of birds on the walls (Logs
12). Then he moved to Gautier, Mississippi, to
live on his wife's father's estate, "Oldfields," with his family.
He left his family to go live in a cottage on the Shearwater pottery compound, and his family moved nearby. He spent the next eighteen years traveling back and forth from Horn Island. During this time he made most of his existing art work. He painted pictures of everything in nature that he possibly could. He died on November 30, 1965. Most of his art work was destroyed because he had no regard of his work. He simply didn't care about his work after he was through with it. A lot of his work that survived was just because he was a bad housekeeper and didn't clean up after himself (WAMA)
Update: In 2005 Hurricane Katrina damaged
or destroyed much of Walter Anderson's work which was housed
in the concrete vault on the Anderson's property in Ocean Springs,
Mississippi. A group of professors and students from Mississippi
State University (and others) volunteered their time and facilities
to help save and preserve Anderson's work. In the photo below,
John Anderson, youngest
son of Walter Anderson, surveys the destroyed property and art
work. Photo is by Paul
F. Jacobs of Mississippi State University.
In 2005 Anderson's daughter Leif Anderson published a book
entitled Dancing with My Father.
Click here for more information.
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Review
of The Horn Island Logs
of Walter Inglis Anderson
by Chris Jones (SHS)
The book The Horn Island Logs Of Walter Inglis Anderson contains the thoughts and experiences of Walter Anderson during his frequent stays on Horn Island. It is sort of a way of getting into his head during the most known of part of his life. Through the book you can see a transformation in his attitude towards his role on Horn Island. In the beginning he sort of considers himself an outsider and an observer; but as the book progresses, you can tell that he considers himself part of nature, that he belongs there.
This
book shows the special world of Walter Anderson. The influences
and inspirations that helped shape his life are mentioned in
the biography of him in the book. The book also
shows his amazing devotion to art. All he did while he
was on the island was draw pictures and keep his log.
SEE
ALSO-- A
Review of Agnes Grinstead Anderson's Approaching
the Magic Hour: Memories of Walter Anderson by
Jeff Durst (SHS) and his biography of Walter Anderson here.
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Related Web Sites
Anderson Museum
provides slide show of works and life of Walter Anderson.
Archives
of past exhibitions at Anderson Museum present many works
of artist.
Realizations
Shop shows many works and designs by Anderson.
A
Painter's Hurricanes
by Christopher Maurer is essay for NPR after Katrina.
The
Art of Walter Inglis Anderson: Centennial Exhibit at Smithsonian
Honors Gulf Coast Genius by Liane Hansen. Page also
has a link to a gallery slide show of the work of Walter Anderson.
Information
about book Form and Fantasy: The Block Prints of
Walter Anderson. Edited by Patricia Pinson,
Edited by Mary Anderson Pickard and published by University
Press of Mississippi.
Brief information about the documentary film Walter
Anderson: Realizations of an Artist by Wolf and
Riley.
Information
about exhibit entitled Visual Harmony: Melody, Words
and Birds of Walter Anderson in 2004 in Resource Library,
an online publication of Traditional Fine Arts Organization.
Works
by Anderson in the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
Memphis
Brooks Museum of Art includes Anderson watercolor.
The
Old Capitol Museum offers two trunks focusing on his work:
one for elementary schools and one for high schools.
Walter
Anderson Symposium hosted at Millsaps College September 23-25,
2004, in Jackson, Mississippi, as the final event in a yearlong
celebration of Anderson’s work on the occasion of the
hundredth anniversary of his birth.
Information
about The Art of Walter Anderson,
edited by Patricia Pinson, includes works never before shown
to the public.
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Bibliography
WAMA Walter Anderson Museum of Art. Available
at http://www.walterandersonmuseum.org/
Anderson, Walter Inglis. edited by Sugg, Redding S., Jr. The Horn Island Logs of Walter Inglis Anderson Rev. Ed. Jackson: University Press of Mississippi, c 1985.
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