| Edward Julius Detmold and his
twin brother, Charles Maurice, were born in 1883. Others born within a year
of them were John Bauer,
Edmund
Dulac, Harvey Dunn, Eric Gill, Walter
Dean Goldbeck, Albert Hurter,
Willy
Pogany, Bert Thomas and
N.C. Wyeth.
Born in London, they were tutored by an uncle
who fostered their artistic talents and a love for natural history. Their
animal subjects were always among the most sensitive of their drawings.
Prodigious early talents, they exhibited watercolors at the Royal Academy
when they were 13 and had a portfolio of etchings issued in 1898.
The
brothers worked jointly on their etchings and illustrations. Their first
book illustrations were produced jointly for the 1899 Pictures From
Birdland. Their next project, at the ripe old age of 20, was a portfolio
of 16 watercolors inspired by Kipling's The Jungle Book. All of the
plates are magnificent, but the one that strikes me most deeply is the one
at left by Maurice entitled Kaa the Python. You can click the
image at left for a full-size scan. My favorite by Edward is at the top of
this page. All can be found in the 1908 Macmillan edition of The Jungle
Book.
They were well on their way to joint and
individual success when Maurice suddenly committed suicide in 1908. He was
24. No satisfactory explanation for the act has even been given. The
coroner's inquest returned a verdict of suicide 'whilst unsound of mind' and
there was apparently a note as well.
 Edward
was stunned by the sudden death of his twin, but managed to continue on with
his art. He lost himself in his work - etchings and drawings and paintings;
even colored block prints that I'd love to see. Does anyone know if these
survive?
His next book illustrations practically
defined him to his publishers and their patrons. These were the 1909 The
Fables of Aesop for which he did 23 color plates and numerous pen & ink
chapter heads. Samples of each at left and right. You can see many more of
the color plates in David Larkin's The Fantastic Creatures of Edward
Julius Detmold.
Then
came Maurice Maeterlink's The Life of the Bee and Birds and Beasts
and The Book of Baby Beasts in 1911. In 1912, it was the Book of
Baby Birds and Hours of Gladness,
which was released in the US as News of Spring (see the Venus Fly
Trap image left). Animals and insects, insects and animals. It was
obviously where his heart was. The renderings were from nature and as
precise as any of the Pre-Raphaelites.
Other books had titles like The Book of
Baby Pets and The Book
of Baby Dogs (1915), Our Little Neighbors and Fabre's Book of
Insects (1921) - all reflecting the
natural history that had so fascinated him as a youngster. A perfect example
is The Spanish Copris from Fabre, right.
 Even
when he branched out, as he theoretically did in 1924 with his wonderful
The Arabian Nights, he was just as likely to choose animals to
illustrate as he was to depict humans. Samples of both are shown here.
It was to be his last illustrated work. In 1921 he had written a tract to
attempt to explain himself, his work and his life. To quote from Keith
Nicholson's introductory essay in The Fantastic Creatures of Edward
Julius Detmold:
"A decade of intense activity was drawing
to a close. Detmold could look back upon some fine achievements, but he
was disillusioned with many of the uninspiring commissions for children's
books he had undertaken. A pointless and destructive world war emphasized
his worst forebodings of man's direction in the new century. The happiness
of his childhood and the loss of his twin brother, now recollected in an
uneasy tranquillity, combined to produce an existential crisis in the
artist. In the wake of feeling that life for him had become meaningless
and intolerable, he produced a literary work which testifies to his
readings in Schopenhauerian pessimism and the Buddhist philosophy of the
Upanishadr and the Bhagavad-Gita. Life, his only
unillustrated work, a book of aphorisms, was published by J. M. Dent in
1921. A key book to an understanding of Detmold's mind, Life is an
inauspicious-looking small volume printed on one side of the leaf only. In
his preface the author writes: `The following words have come to the
writer, over a period of many years, as the fruits of self-overcoming.'
From the curious, mystical text we learn that there are two ways of
attainment: `The direct positive way - through progressive liberation -
passing from the lesser realization of the body, to the greater
realization of the mind, and therefrom to the realization of the infinite
through the soul; and the direct negative way -through disillusionment -
which comes of infatuation with things in themselves, and the inevitable
passing thereof.' In the event, Life was Detmold's farewell to the
public world of books, and his testament.
"Resigned from the world, Detmold went to
live in Montgomeryshire where, after a long retirement and almost totally
forgotten, he died in July, 1957. Strangely, there exists no official
record of his death."
I should note that Peppin and Micklethwait in
Book Illustrators of the Twentieth Century, the most recent of the
reference books I used, states that he, too,
committed suicide. Alas.
The final image we've found from him is in
the 1924 Penrose Annual. It's the lovely pair of rabbits right.
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