| Green, Elizabeth Shippen | |||
Elizabeth
Shippen Green was born in Philadelphia in 1871. Other artists born within a
year of her were F.R. Gruger,
Orson Lowell,
Eric Pape,
Maxfield
Parrish, Henry Reuterdahl,
Charles
Robinson and W.H.
Robinson. Her father, Jasper Green, had been an artist/illustrator and
encouraged her choice of careers. At 17, she began submitting illustrations
to local newspapers and magazines. At 18, she enrolled at the
Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, doing her assignments both
scholastic and professional from a makeshift studio in her bedroom. At 23,
she was a professional fashion illustrator for the Ladies' Home Journal
and one of the forty applicants accepted for
Howard Pyle's
first class in illustration at the Drexel Institute of Arts and
Sciences.It was there she met Jessie Willcox Smith and, in 1897, Violet Oakley. Smith and Green joined Oakley in her apartment studio that year. Oakley and Smith illustrated an edition of Evangeline that year. Green and Smith would collaborate on several early projects including a 1902 calendar for Bryn Mawr College and another calendar, later a 1903 book titled The Book of the Child, featuring illustrations of children
The studio she shared with Smith and Oakley was soon outgrown and the women rented a large, English-style house and other buildings on a rural 200 acre estate called The Red Rose Inn. That same year, just one month shy of her 30th birthday, she signed an exclusive contract (as did Pyle and Edwin Austin Abbey) with Harper's Magazine for whom she would work for the next 23 years.
After five years at the Red Rose Inn, the women moved in 1906 to a multi-dwelling setting they dubbed Cogslea (Cozens, Oakley, Green, Smith - Cozens being Henrietta Cozens who functioned as the household manager allowing the three artists to paint). Most issues of Harper's during the decade featured her work, quite often on the coveted color pages. She was often called upon to delineate stories featuring children and she did so with great sensitivity and aplomb. More often she painted a wide range of topics including potboilers and romances and displayed a flair for the dramatic and exotic that demonstrated the attention she had paid in Pyle's classroom. Her penchant for accumulating large quantities of clippings which she carefully filed must have been an enormous help when she was asked to paint some of the unusual subjects that are found in her work.
Her work for Harper's was also
compiled into many books as the serialized stories were recycled into the
more permanent medium. Old Country House (1902), The Book of the
Child (1903), Castle Comedy (1904), A Very Small Person
(1906), The Mansion (1911), The White People (1917). In 1920
she moved back to a house near Cogslea. In 1924 she expanded her market
beyond Harper's, which by then was nearly 100% text anyway,
illustrating books for Houghton Mifflin, McKay, and Doran. By the end of the
1920's, there was little demand for her work in a marketplace dominated by
magazines like Colliers and The Saturday Evening Post
featuring the works of Rockwell, Pruett Carter,
Cornwell,
Edwin Georgi, Rockwell Kent, John Lagatta,
Mead
Schaeffer and Leyendecker. She faded into a happy retirement as what she described as
one of "Helen Hokinson's proper 'club' ladies" Again I will recommend to you The Red Rose Girls (Abrams, 2000) by Alice A. Carter - most of the material in this essay is taken from that work. The images, with the exception of the small photo of ESG at the top are from the original pages of Harper's. The photo is taken from The Red Rose Girls (pg. 89) and is from the Archives of American Art. |
|||
|
Information supplied by: http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/green.htm |