Thursday, March 13, 2025

celebrated Hollywood art director was US camoufleur

To my surprise, I have known about Richard Day for years. I simply hadn’t realized that a camoufleur named Richard Day was the same person whom I was aware of for other reasons. As a graphic designer, I have long been interested in the book designs of Merle Armitage, and I knew that one of the books he designed was The Lithographs of Richard Day. Foreword by Carl Zigrosser. New York: E. Weyhe, 1932. While I have sometimes collected Armitage books, I’ve never owned this particular one (it’s not among his finest designs), and in truth I haven’t had much interest in Richard Day’s lithographs (or at least the ones in this volume).

But my interest has been reenlivened—for other reasons. This same Richard Day, as it turns out, was one of Hollywood’s most famous art directors. He was a Canadian whose full name was Richard Welsted Day (1896-1972). He didn’t settle in the US until c1918. Prior to that, he served in World War I as a captain in the Canadian Expeditionary Force, which may or may not have included experience with camouflage.

Following the war, having worked as a commercial artist in Victoria BC, he moved to Hollywood, in the hope that he might find work in the motion picture industry. By good fortune, he apprenticed with Eric von Stroheim, worked as a scene painter, and was soon appointed art director of the film Foolish Wives. As his career progressed, he moved on to other opportunites as a Supervising Art Director. In addition to von Stroheim, he also worked with Tod Browning, Samuel Goldwyn, and Elia Kazan.

Day’s work on hundreds of Hollywood films resulted in his nomination for forty Academy Awards, as well as earning Oscars for Dark Angel, How Green Was My Valley, This Above All, My Gal Sal, A Streetcar Named Desire, On the Waterfront, and Dodsworth. By the mid-1930s, as a motion picture art director, he was the highest-paid in Hollywood.

When the US joined the Allies in WWII, Day became an American citizen and joined the US Marine Corps, during which he specialized in “camouflage designs and relief mapping techniques.” His final film, produced in 1970, was Tora! Tora! Tora!, which included his reenactment of the attack on Pearl Harbor, which (according to the New York Times) cost the film’s producers “more money than the Japanese had [spent] on the original attack in 1941.”

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

WWI Armenian-American camoufleurs in US Army

WWI American poster
Back in 2013, I first learned about an Armenian-born American artist named Nishan G. Toor (born Nishan G. Tooroonjian), who had served as a camouflage artist during World War I. I had long been aware of the camouflage involvement of another Armenian artist, the famous American painter, Arshile Gorky, who taught camouflage at Grand Central Art School in New York during WWII, until “visited” by the FBI.

More recently I’ve found out about a third Armenian artist, named Katchador Boroian (1889-1989), who contributed to camouflage during WWI. Born in Chunkoosh, Armenia, Borolan emigrated to the US in 1912, and settled in Chicago, where he studied at the Art Institute of Chicago. During those years, he supported himself as a commercial artist, which, among other projects, included his completion of a mural for the Chicago Daily News building.

In June 1917, he registered for the draft in Chicago. He was soon after inducted into the US Army where, according to various sources, he “painted helmets and artillery for camouflage.”

He moved to Los Angeles after the war, and lived there for the rest of his life, initially in Yettem, then in Dinuba, and finally in Fresno. Earlier, he had taught himself needlepoint, which would prove invaluable when, disabled by glaucoma in the 1940s, he could no longer use standard art materials. Twenty-five years later, he discovered that he could resume his earlier work if he used needlepoint, which he continued to do for the rest of his life.

At the close of his life, at age 99, Boroian was blind in one eye, but continued to work at a card table in his retirement quarters at the California Armenian Home in Fresno.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Wednesday, March 5, 2025

Luther E. DeJoiner / WWI American ship camoufleur

Luther E. DeJoiner
The number and variety of artists, designers, illustrators, stage designers, and architects who served as camouflage experts in both World Wars continues to astonish me.

Among the most recent is an American painter named Luther Evans DeJoiner (1885-1955). Born in Switzer KY, he was influenced by his father, a portrait painter and photographer named Oscar D. DeJoiner (1860-1924). Around the time of Luther’s birth, the family moved from Kentucky to Chattanooga TN (where his father gave art lessons in his studio), then to St Louis MO before finally settling in Alameda CA.

In California, Luther DeJoiner studied at the Mark Hopkins Institute (now the San Francisco Art Institute), and wth Arthur Hill Gilbert in Monterey. As a landscape painter, among his primary interests was the study of nature, and he is frequently cited as a naturalist as well as a painter. He lived in Santa Cruz for most of his adult life, but he traveled thoughout the country with his wife, Emily DeJoiner, in search of subject settings, with a particular interest in redwoods.

When he registered for the draft in June 1917, he described himself as a self-employed painter. During World War I, he served as a ship camoufleur designer, for which he was stationed at Mare Island during 1917-18.

In his final years, he made an attempt to move beyond landscape painting, by experimenting with semi-abstract, non-objective compositions. His final exhibition was held in September 1954, several months before he died. Long preoccupied with fishing, he died unexpectedly of a heart attack, on Christmas day, while fishing on the San Lorenzo River near Santa Cruz.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Sunday, February 23, 2025

construction of a WWI dummy tank by british in france

Above Dummy tank being constructed in France by British forces, 1916.

•••

SWANSEA'S TANK in The Cambria Daily Leader (Wales), October 23, 1919, p. 8—

Somebody at the War Office is evidently deeply concerned that towns' war savings presentation tanks shall be properly maintained and prevented from deterioration into rust and desuetude. Swansea's unattended and unapproachable. because of the trivial paling round it, evidently would not please him, to judge from the following note from the W.O. Publicity Department on tank presentation:—"Each city and town so honored should arrange for proper care and attention to be bestowed upon its charge, so as to keep it always a proud and fitting memorial to an arm of the Service which did so much to save the lives of many thousands of citizen soldiers. The tank should rest upon a firm concrete foundation of ample area, so that on wet days visitors may not carry mud into the interior. The exterior of the hull and the roof should be well cleaned and thoroughly painted at regular intervals, and the wonderful 'dazzle' and 'Futurist camouflage effects may be used with advantage. But if camouflage is not possible, a good serviceable brown color may be used without departing from realism, as, indeed, many tanks went into action plainly painted and with no attempt at cunning disguise. The tracks or road chains should be very thoroughly treated, else they will soon show signs of rust and decay and, as it is not practicable to keep them bright, they should be painted a color as near the natural steel as possible. A tank crew dearly loved to have all the inside of the machine white in color, and it is doubtful if their choice can be improved upon, with a dull black for the engine. For the rest, brass work and steel rods should be kept bright and. clean, and this duty could well be included in the daily routine of an employee of the local council. In wet weather, and at night, the roof of the machine should be covered with a tarpaulin." All this, emanating evidently from a man who knows his tank well, contrasts strangely with talk of using the presentation for scrap iron. It is a counsel of perfection, of course, but Swansea ought to get some useful tips from it.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

tacoma builds phony tank for WWI liberty loan parade

Above WWI American dummy tank in Liberty Loan parade, 1918

•••

CITY TANK IN LOAN PARADE in Tacoma Times (Tacoma WA) April 06, 1918, p. 8—

One of the novel features of Saturday’s Liberty parade was a miniature “tank” furnished by the city streets department. The tank was built from a new caterpillar tractor just purchased by the city. Although the caterpillar tread of the city machine does not go over the top of the body, as it does in the battle tanks, the machine was camouflaged by scenic artists so that it bore a startling resemblance to the new war terrors. It was armed with a half dozen fierce-looking guns. Commissioner Atkins announced that he would guide the city tank through the streets.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

a primer for the wee ones on the value of camouflage

Sarah L. Raymo, Camouflaged Teddy Bear Patent

MILTON HAVEN CUB NOTES in Haverfordwest and Milford Haven Telegraph (Haverfordwest, Pembrokeshire, Wales), July 9, 1919—

A TALK ABOUT "CAMOUFLAGE."
I suppose a good number of you Cubs have heard the word "Camouflage"? These big words puzzle some of the older folk sometimes, and when they see a word which they do not understand, they go and look for a book called a "dictionary" which explains the meaning.

DECEIVING THE ENEMY.
When the word "camouflage" was first brought to the public notice, people wondered what it meant.

We people who live near the coast soon found out what " camouflage" meant. At first we saw most peculiar painted ships, and as you looked at them, you could imagine they represented all kinds of wild animals. To look at them in the distance, they did not look like ships, and really it was puzzling, and when we turned to our neighbor and said, " look at that funny ship," they said she is " camouflaged."

Now I wonder if you Cubs understand why those ships were painted in this way? Why was the ship "camouflaged"?

It was to deceive the enemy.

NATURE'S CAMOUFLAGE.
You little Cubs have little gardens at school, you learn to grow all kinds of flowers and things. When your flowers grow and bear nice green leaves, sometimes you wonder why they don't grow much nicer, the petals of the flowers are all eaten away, and scarcely a green leaf on them. Now, if you look very, very closely and very, very hard, you will find tiny little flies, slugs, and insects creeping round the flowers.

Do you know why it is you never can see those little pests? It is because nature has "camouflaged" them to protect them from their enemy. Nature has made them the same color as the plants they live upon or at least a similar color, and they are in this peculiar color to deceive their enemy. 

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

a dazzling pair of scarecrows—or tailors' dummies

Cover / Dazzle News Online
 

CAMOUFLAGED SKIRTS in Thames Star (New Zealand), Vol 52 No 13729, June 22, 1918, p. 4—

The latest concerning camouflage comes from "Lady Kitty," a Melbourne writer, who says:—The "camouflage" skirt! It is here. Oh! Oh! Oh! The cretonne skirt was bad enough; but the camouflage skirt is a sartorial disaster. There is not an article in the whole of one's wardrobe that could possibly "go" with the skirt. It made its first appearance in Sydney, where six and eight guineas are being asked—and given—for these camouflage skirts. They are of silk, but such silk! It is most suitably called "crazy." This demented silk starts at being a wonderful pattern in colors which absolutely pale the gorgeousness of all Eastern color magnificence, when suddenly, it is camouflaged with great patches of dullish background. Most weird! Camouflage, you know, is to make things appear other than what they really are—to disguise them, in fact, so that the crazy silk sets out to be a very striking fabric when it is suddenly camouflaged by broad strips of plain color which quite disguise its original identity, but really make it more striking still. Camouflage parties, at which people wear camouflaged fancy dress, have become quite a rage for fund-raising purposes; and if guests are ingenious enough the result is screamingly tunny. From start to finish nothing is what it seems. Even the host and hostess are represented by a couple of scarecrows, or a pair of tailors' dummies; and the supper table laden with what is apparently a delicious repast, is found to be but a faked delightfulness. Camouflage parties can be immensely entertaining when worked out by clever brains.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Friday, February 21, 2025

instead of the frontlne they put me on the subway line

Above Paris-based artist Jean Kisling in his studio.

•••

PARIS PUTS ARTISTS IN ARMY TO CAMOUFLAGE TRUCKS, TANKS, CANNON Cubists, Surrealists and Futurists Put Fantastic Designs and Theories Into Practice, in Scranton Times Tribune (Scranton PA), September 22, 1939—

Paris, Sept. 21 (UP)—Cubist, surrealist, modernist, futurist, realist, and naturalist painters who once cluttered Montparnasse terraces are in the army as camouflage artists.

Canvases and theories have been put aside. Long-haired, bearded, shabbily-dressed dreamers have left attics to become clean-shaven, neatly-dressed army men.

Trucks, tanks, armored cars, motorcycles, cannon and staff cars are blossoming with fantastic crazy-quilt designs done in reds, blues. greens, and ochres. Many-schooled cafe arguments have turned into a joint pooling of ideas to befuddle the enemy.

The Montparnasse district, with blue-tinted windows and dimmed lights still is doing a roaring business, but most of the artists are gone. Sidewalk tables now are filled with soldiers and others who have found the terrace darkness to their liking.

Some of the artists are unhappy, however. Jean Kisling [whose father, the artist Moise Kisling had a studio in the same building as Amedeo Modigliani], for example, who is known to every terrace habitué, put away his brushes a fortnight ago to fight the Germans. But, as he put it, “I wanted to fight on the Maginot Line and they put me on the subway line.” He was made a subway station guard as a member of the passive defense squad.

He wouldn't mind that particularly, except that he hates the subway and never had ridden on a subway train.


•••

H. HODIGLIENI in New York Tribune, Febuary 7, 1920, p. 4—

Paris, Feb. 6—H. Hodiglieni [sic Amedeo Modigliani], an artist, who claimed to have invented cubist painting, was found dead in a hovel in the Latin Quarter. He used to frequent Paris cafés dressed in trousers with legs of different colored materials.

•••

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Thursday, February 20, 2025

Clara Lathrop Strong / New England Camouflage Artist

Above Portrait drawing of British author Aldous Huxley  by Eric Pape, teacher of Clara Lathrop Strong, as published in The Sphere, October 12, 1929. Public domain.

•••

On October 3, 1917, a brief article appeared in The Boston Transcript. The headline read CAMOUFLAGE BY WOMEN: Here Is a Chance for Wily Females to Show the Boches Some New Art Tricks. The full text read as follows—

A project has been launched to organize women artists who may desire instruction in the work ot camouflage, Land has been offered for a camp, and the scheme has the unofficial approval ot the War Department, which is, however, at the present time, unable to spare any men from the first camouflage unlt as instructors. If and when they become avallable, further detalls as to time and place and equipment, etc., will be given out. It is believed that many women artists will embrace the opportunity to use thelr special training in patriotic service of this sort. It is probable that the women would be used only in this country, nevertheless the exigencies of war cannot be foreseen, and preparation along this line is thought to be desirable. We are informed that “there is no age limit,” but applicants should be strong and active, and should have had training in landscape, mural or scenic palnting, or in sculpture. All those interested are requested to send thelr names and addresees to Mrs. Clara Strong, Marshfield Hllls, Mass.

Mrs. Clara [née Lathrop] Strong (1883-1955) was a painter, muralist, illustrator, sculptor, and writer. Born in Cambridge MA, she studied in California at Stanford University, and subsequently at Oberlin College in Ohio. After returning to Massachusetts, she studied art in Boston at the Eric Pape School of Art, and in New York with muralist Edwin Blashfield*. She opened her own studio in 1908. A year later, she married a Boston Back Bay surgeon named Seth L. Strong, who had also attended Oberlin, and earned his medical degree at Harvard University in 1913. During the first twelve years of their marriage, they became parents of four children.

In late 1917, a lengthy article appeared in the Chicago Examiner (December 2, p. 29), titled Camouflage the Art of Faking, Throwing Fritz Off the Trail. One of the illustrations was a photograph of Clara Strong, working in her studio. The caption reads: Mrs. C.L. Strong, Who Heads a School for Camouflage. In the closing paragraph, the article states:

Mrs. Clara Lothrop [sic] Strong, of Marshfield Hills, Mass., a well-known New England artist, has formed a school for painting camouflage.

Two other articles claim that Mrs. Strong “was the honorary head of the women’s camouflage war workers during the war” (Boston Traveler, July 13, 1921), and that “She became nationally famous as the originator of the camouflage camp, and in the World War was an instructor in the art of wartime camouflage” (Boston Herald, February 16, 1923).

Her participation in the Women’s Reserve Camouflage Corps during WWI is confirmed by an article in the New York Times (July 12, 1918), titled CAMOUFLAGE THE RECRUIT: Women’s Service Corps Redecorate the Landship in Union Square. She was one of twenty-four women who participated in that project.

The time frame is confusing, but the same 1921 article in the Boston Traveler states that Clara Lathrop Strong, her husband and their children lived in Bangkok, Thailand, during 1918. During that assignment, her husband was in charge of the Royal Medical College there. It provided Clara Strong with the opportunity to become acquainted with the traditional art of that country. In an issue of the Boston Advertiser (February 19, 1922), she is said to have made sculptures that were derivative of certain ceremonial dances, and to have been allowed to paint inside the Royal Palace, “where no foreigner and especially no woman, had previously been permitted.”

However, during this same time period, there are other news articles that indicate that the marriage of Seth and Clara Strong was disentegrating. On the front page of a 1922 issue of the Boston American (November 15), there was a portrait photograph of Clara Lathrop Strong for an article with the headline: SCULPTRESS ACCUSED BY HER HUSBAND: WIFE TRIED TO KILL HIM SAYS DOCTOR. The husband claimed that, as early as 1919, when he refused his wife’s request that the family move to New York, she assaulted him, and threatened to harm their youngest child. He also claimed that she had attempted to kill him by turning on the gas jets in his Boston office. All of which Clara Lathrop Strong denied.

The husband filed for divorce and petitioned for custody of their children. “I loved my husband dearly,” she said, “until he brought this suit against me.” She countersued for custody, and when the marriage was terminated, she was granted “separate support and custody of her four children.” All this was headlined in the press, which must have been unbearable for everyone involved.

As if that were not tragic enough, another incident took place in 1934, coincident with the Great Depression. This apparently had to do with the Emergency Relief Administration (ERA), a government assistance agency that provided assistance to artists. In an article in The Boston Herald (November 21), Clara Strong is quoted as describing herself as “nearly destitute.” 

She had applied for a painting commission but was rejected on the grounds that “relief officials told her that she seemed to have sufficient means to live on.” In anonymous protest, she entered a mural in an annual exhibition—using a pseudonym—in which she satirized “the ERA and ‘sacred cows’ who have been given ERA commissions.” When the artwork was rejected, she protested. Living “modestly” in a temporary residence, she said that “she has had to take her son out of college and has sold her antique furniture as proof of her qualifications for help from the state and government.”

That’s the extent of our findings so far. A distressingly complex story, and no doubt unexplained in many regards.

•••

*It’s interesting that in 1917, when the US entered WWI, a group of East Coast artists, headed by Barry Faulkner and Sherry E. Fry, formed a civilian organization called the American Camouflage Corps. It anticipated the wartime need for skilled artists to serve as army camoufleurs. The chairman of the group was Clara Strong’s teacher, muralist Edwin Blashfield.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Wednesday, February 19, 2025

John M. Goodwin / WWI railway artillery camoufleur

Here’s a puzzle: I haven’t been able to ascertain if the John Goodwin who authored a book in 2016 on Railway Guns (see cover above) is the same World War I American artist who developed railway artillery during that war. Of course, it can't be (unless that book was a reprint), but they may be related. The full name of the earlier person was John M. Goodwin. But I know almost nothing beyond that. What I do know comes from searching archival newspapers. Below are two items I’ve recently found— 

ANON, The Washington Times (Washington DC), April 25, 1919, p. 9—

John M. Goodwin, of the artillery division, Ordinance Department, and in charge of the camouflage of railway artillery, will give an illustrated talk on “Camouflage” at the United Service Club of America, Dupont Circle, tonight at 8:15.

•••

J.M. GOODWIN TO LECTURE. Will Give Course in Art at Research University, in The Washington Post, February 5, 1921, p. 7—

John M. Goodwin, Civil Engineer, has been named professor of art at Research University. The appintment was announced yesterday by President L.W. Rapeer, of the university.

Mr, Goodwin developed the dual complementary system for concealing big railway mounts during the World War, making his studies amid observations from airplanes. He later delivered lectures for the government on “Scientific Color Camouflage.” His studies have been pursued in the United States, Italy and France…

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Tuesday, February 18, 2025

camouflaged ham sandwich tastes as good as chicken

Above Dazzle-camouflaged USS Famlhaut, side views (1944).

•••

A young Ohio-born artist named Charles William Becker, Jr (1891-1978) served (if only briefly) as a US Army camoufleur near the end of World War I. He registered for the draft at age 26, at which time he was single, unemployed, and with “week eyes.” Until a month earlier, he had been an artist for several years on the staff of the Cincinnati Times-Star.

As reported in that newspaper on June 4, 1918, p. 2, in TIMES-STAR ARTIST NOW CAMOUFLEUR, he was stationed at Camp Taylor in Kentucky, as First Sergeant in the Camouflage Division. He is quoted in the newspaper as having said the following—

This training surely does camouflage a ham sandwich—it makes it taste as good as chicken. Never had such an appetite.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

we paint fake cows and nail them on wooden frames

Above The founder of Futurism, Italian poet and editor Filippo Tommaso Emilio Marinetti (1876-1944), a fascist if ever there was one. As in: “We will glorify war—the world's only hygiene—militarism, patriotism, the destructive gesture of freedom-bringers, beautiful ideas worth dying for, and scorn for woman.” Below that is a notebook sketch he made of a dazzle-camouflaged ship.

•••

Margaret E. Sangster, “Camouflage” in Christian Herald, 1918—

“I’m in the Camouflage Division,” the rather new soldier told me proudly.

“Camouflage?” I repeated it after him in a questioning way. “Camouflage?” (That, of course, was before the word became nationally-known and popular.)

“Yes, camouflage,” the rather new soldier told me. “Most of the fellows in it are artists, and we have an awfully interesting time.”

“What.” I asked,"do you do?”

“Why,” the rather new soldier told me, “we disguise things to—to fool the enemy. For instance, we paint canvas cows and nail them on wood frames, and when they are placed in the field in front of a trench, anybody looking across the field would think that it was nothing but a peaceful bit of pasture. We paint the sides of ships. too, with long, quivering lines so that they will look like waves, and sometimes with great spots of vivid color so that, at a distance, they will be too indefinite for a submarine to shoot at. That’s camouflage!”

“Then,” I said, “it isn't a new idea, is it? How about the siege of Troy when they brought spies into a city concealed in a wooden horse? That was camouflage! How about the time, in Macbeth, when an army of men marched on a castle holding boughs before them so that they looked like a moving grove of trees? That was camouflage, too.”  

"Of course it was,” agreed the rather new soldier, “you're right—camouflage isn’t a new idea. It’s only the old idea of deception made into a fine art!”

• Okay, I admit to being puzzled at first. American writer Margaret Elizabeth Sangster (1938-1912) died in 1912. Camouflage was not formally introduced (by that name) until 1914, and this news article is dated 1918. What's wrong with this picture? Nothing, as it turns out. There was another Margaret E. Sangster, who was also a writer and the granddaughter of the earlier person—it was the granddaughter who wrote this article.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Monday, February 17, 2025

H. Ledyard Towle / artist, camouflage instructor / hero

The Army officer encircled in yellow above is Captain H. Ledyard Towle. He is conducting an outdoor instructional session during World War I, for the purpose of teaching camouflage to members of the American Womens Reserve Camouflage Corps. In earlier postings, we may have blogged about Towle more often than nearly anyone else. 

Not only did he work with this unusual women’s organization, he also became prominent as a “color engineer” in the years following the war. 



He had a significant influence on the postwar popularity of brightly colored automobiles, the colors used in American homes (inside and out), and the choice of colors used (for increased worker safety) in factory interiors. We’ve talked about his activities not only in various blogposts but also in an online video called Art, Women’s Rights, and Camouflage.



•••

Here now are two more recent finds about Towle’s doubly “colorful life”:

GLEANINGS FROM THE WORLD’S PRESS. What Colors Can Do. Queenslander (Brisbane, Queensland). August 8, 1929, p. 63—

“Who did this?” roared the president of a New York bank when he discovered an impish cartoon of himself on the back of an envelope. The guilty 13-year-old mail clerk jumped guiltily, but stood his ground, “I did, sir.” He held out shaking fingers, for he needed his three dollars a week. “I’ll rub it off for you, sir.”

“You will not!” snapped the president. He put the cartoon in his pocket, and his eyes twinkled at the young culprit. “If you can draw as well as that you’d better study art. Go to school nights if you have to, but leave my stationery alone, young man!”

In this unconventional way began the artistic career of Capt. H. Ledyard Towle, chief color expert for the General Motors Corporation and a pioneer in the modern movement to put beauty and color into the American home. If you have a lavender ice box, or a “sunlit” alarm clock, or a flame-colored sports car, the chances are he is responsible (writes Grace M. Fletcher, in “The World’s Work”).


•••

Carnegie Hero Fund Commission (online post). Harold Ledyard Towle, Merry Point VA. Act Details: July 5, 1951. Type of Act: Drowning—

Harold Ledyard Towle saved SheIva Jean Lankford from drowning, Merry Point, Virginia, July 5, 1951. While riding on an inflated tire-tube in the Carrotoman River, Shelve, 9, who could not swim, was swept into deep water by a strong wind and drifted 300 feet from the bank. Although warned by a physician to avoid exertion, Towle, 51, color engineer, ran 250 feet to the bank and entered the water. He waded 50 feet and with great effort swam 325 feet through waves two feet high to overtake Shelva. In a badly winded and weakened condition he took hold of Shelva and supported her. A man rowed a boat to them, and he and Towle aided Shelva from the water. Towle lacked strength to climb into the boat and grasped the gunwale. The man rowed towing Towle to wadable water, and all reached the bank. Shelva was extremely nervous, and she and Towle sustained numerous welts from stinging nettles. Both recovered.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Saturday, February 15, 2025

women's contributions to wartime camouflage / WWI

It is difficult to know to what extent American women contributed directly to the design of wartime camouflage. A case in point is the artist Constance Cochrane (1888-1952), whose father and grandfather were career military officers. As a painter, she had a lifelong interest in seascapes and coastal views. In one source it is said that “she joined the navy during both the first and second World Wars to design camouflage for ships.” Another claims that “during World War I she, like Frederick Waugh [a prominent seascape artist], designed camouflage for navy battleships.” A graduate of the Philadelphia School of Design for Women (Moore College of Art), she was associated with an alliance of women artists known as The Ten or The Philadelphia Ten. During WWI, she was a member of the Women’s Reserve Camouflage Corps, whose activities we’ve discussed at length in earlier posts and in an online video talk.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Saturday, February 8, 2025

John Downes Whiting / American ship camoufleur

For years I’ve been trying to find out about an American artist, author and book illustrator named John Downes Whiting (1884-1977). I’ve been looking for information about his activities as a ship camouflage designer during World War I. One complication is that he is often cited as John D. Whiting, so it’s easy to confuse him with another person named John David Whiting (1882-1951), who belonged to a religious sect in Jerusalem called The American Colony.

In contrast, John Downes Whiting (known as Jack Whiting) was, as he described himself, a “Connecticut Yankee” and a graduate of the Yale School of Fine Arts (BFA 1915). Born in Ridgefield CT, he was named after his uncle, John Ireland Howe Downes (1861-1933), who was also an artist, a Yale graduate, and the librarian for the art school there for 23 years.

As an artist, Jack Whiting’s own profession was that of a book and magazine illustrator, but he wrote books as well. In 1920, he published Practical Illustration: A Guide for Artists (see cover above), and in 1928, he wrote and illustrated a semi-fictionalized account of his experience during WWI, titled Convoy: A Story of the War at Sea.

On his draft registration form, dated September 5, 1918, he lists his occupation as a “camoufleur” with the US Shipping Board, at 345 East 33rd Street in New York. That is the street address of the studio of a prominent muralist and interior designer named William Andrew Mackay, whom I’ve been writing about for years. We have blogged about Mackay’s contribution to ship camouflage, and have also published an essay on Mackay, his ship camouflage proposals, and his school for camoufleurs, headquartered at his studio, which he called the Mackay School of Camouflage.

According to biographical entries, Whiting joined the Connecticut National Guard in 1917, where he served in Company F of the 2nd Regiment for one year. From June through December of 1918, he was affiliated with Mackay’s team of camouflage artists, who were assigned to develop so-called “dazzle camouflage” schemes for US merchant ships. They were not strictly a part of the US Navy, but were affiliated with the civilian Shipping Board, which was responsible for applying the schemes to merchant ships in the harbors.

As Mackay himself described it, it was at his Manhattan studio—

that the first work of camouflage was developed. In all, 749 vessels were camouflaged, and sixty men, artists, architects and designers, made this shop their headquarters, under direction of the United States Shipping Board, working over designs, testing colors, peering through the periscope at the wooden models, and then dashing off to try out some few effect on the vessels that, in a few days, would be depending upon our skill in the art of disguise to save them from the U-boats.


I have a list of the names of sixty-four (not sixty) of Mackay’s camouflage school affiliates. All this is more or less confirmed by a review of John Downes Whiting’s book on Practical Illustration that appeared in The Daily Northwestern (Evanston IL) on January 22, 1921, p. 7. The book’s author, the reviewer states—

…served in the camouflage department of the navy during the war. One of Mr. Whiting’s assignments was to find out just what lines and colors did in reducing the visibility of ships. The results of his experiments, conducted at sea and on the coast, formed the basis of many of the weird but efficacious desgns which camouflaged our transports. William Andrew Mackay, the mural painter, with whom Mr. Whiting worked for the navy, says that Whiting’s book is written in the same thorough manner in which the author tackled his war work.

In 1928, when Whiting wrote a semi-fictionalized account of his wartime experience in Convoy: A Story of the War at Sea, it included an entire chapter about Mackay and his camouflage school. It also features a pen-and-ink drawing by Whiting (reproduced above) of a ship camoufleur looking at a camouflaged ship model in a testing theatre. In a different later source (from a 1932 issue of The Literary Digest), Whiting states that during the war he designed “camouflage for Army transports and supply ships.” In that case, it seems likely that he also worked with Frederick A. Pawla (1876-1964), who, as the head camouflage for the AEF Embarkation Service, oversaw the camouflage of “many of the army transports, particularly cargo carriers.” We have previously blogged about Pawla here and here.


On page 242 of Whiting’s book titled Convoy, there is an offhand reference to ship camouflage which may be relevant, or maybe not. The sentence reads: “The Monodoc, looking, in her camouflage, like an intoxicated snake, lay at anchor in the river.” The book’s text, as mentioned earlier is a book of fiction, based on fact. So perhaps we shouldn’t surprised that there doesn’t seem to have been a WWI American ship named Monodoc (altought there were ships named Monadnock). Maybe he simply invented the name.

In the same book, on page 80, Whiting provides some insight into an on-going conflict between Mackay’s camouflage team (affilidated with the US Shipping Board) and the US Navy’s own official Camouflage Section, which had been given the authority to originate all ship camouflage schemes, both Navy and civilian, which was greatly resented by those who were loyal to Mackay.

As Whiting alludes to in his book, Mackay’s camouflage school may not have been unauthorized by the Navy, and was thus conducted “quietly.” But, as he also implies, Mackay’s men also side-stepped strict compliance with the Navy’s regulations by claiming that the schemes that they were given required alteration to make them fit the vessels they were required to apply them to.


Here is the dialogue from Whiting’s book—

“I thought these [ship camouflage] designs were made in Washington, under the Navy Department.”

“Yep, that’s the theory. Those Johnnies think we only put their patterns on the steamers, but, b-bless you, the plans we get from there only fit half the shapes in this town. We have to camouflage every darned thing from a tanker to a barge.”

“And so your chief [William Andrew Mackay] is quietly evolving his own school for camoufleurs?”

“That’s it. The queerist lot of wights are working here, scraped up from the corners of Bohemia. But they work; Mackay is a hustler.”

“Drives you, does he?”

“No, he innoculates us; he has more ideas than all your admirals put together. And the boys are simply nuts about him.”


A small selection of other illustrations by Whiting, including book covers and an interior illustrations, are also featured in this post.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Sunday, December 29, 2024

who cut off your tie at the Art Academy of Cincinnati?

Batchelor and Behrens / Art Academy of Cincinnati
In the late 1980s, I was living in Cincinnati OH, where I was head of the graphic design program at the Art Academy of Cincinnati. It was an interesting place at the time, the school as well as the city, and I have enduring memories of wonderful students and colleagues. After more than thirty years, I am still in contact with some of them.

Among my favorite colleagues from those days was a British-born printmaker named Anthony (Tony) Batchelor, who died a few months ago. The two of us, given the right circumstances, were prone to bursting out with Pythonesque sillyness. I still have a photograph (shown here) of Tony and myself at one of those spontaneous moments.

In 1981, I had published a book called Art and Camouflage: Concealment and Deception in Nature, Art and War. It did not sell particularly well, but it received sufficient attention (as from the Whole Earth Catalog, for example) that it acheived some small notoreity as one of the early books about the role that artists played in the study of camouflage, both in nature and in war. 

Various things happened as a result: In 1988, soon after I joined the faculty at AAC, the school succeeded in obtaining a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to host a community-wide series of activities (talks, exhibits, and other events) on the theme of art and camouflage

That same year I was contacted by British documentary filmmakers who were in process of making a film on the same subject, to air on television in both the US and the UK. The UK version was titled The Art of Deception, and appeared as a segment of Equinox on BBC televison (the name Cincinnati was misspelled). The American version, titled Disguises of War, was broadcast as part of NOVA on American Public Television, by way of WGBH Boston. That version can still be viewed online

Roy Behrens as interviewed on NOVA (1990)

 

A still frame from that program is reproduced here. It was filmed on an exceedingly hot afternoon on the grounds of the Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Dayton OH. It was nearly impossible to complete the filming because (being an air force base) airplanes were constantly taking off. I was wearing a purple shirt and an especially appropriate necktie, the top half of which was a contrasting color, while the bottom half was the very same color as the shirt. 

When it aired nationally, I recall that my mother comically asked, “Who cut off your tie?” Another funny consequence is that the next day after its national broadcast, I received phone calls at the AAC, from former students in Wisconsin and Iowa, saying that they had watched the program, not knowing that I was included. One person told me that, “as the program started, I said to myself, ‘This is something that Roy Behrens would really enjoy”—and then, suddenly, I appeared on screen. Believe me, I no longer look like this.

PRINT magazine article on camouflage


Around the same time I received a call from the managing editor at PRINT in New York, the leading graphic design newstand magazine in the US. Would I be willing to prepare a major article on camouflage in relation to art and design? The resulting article was called Blend and Dazzle: The Art of Camouflage (January / February 1991). In no time, that then led to being appointed a Contributing Editor at PRINT, which I enjoyed tremendously for at least a dozen years or more.

RELATED LINKS    

Dazzle Camouflage: What is it and how did it work?Nature, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Women's Rights, and CamouflageEmbedded Figures, Art, and Camouflage / Art, Gestalt, and Camouflage /  Optical science meets visual artDisruption versus dazzle / Chicanery and conspicuousness /  Under the big top at Sims' circus

Saturday, December 28, 2024

from art to camouflage to the demolition of his home

Walter K. Pleuthner at age 82
Walter Pleuthner's WWI ship camouflage scheme

When Walter Karl Pleuthner registered for the draft in White Plains NY on September 12, 1918, he was officially listed—and signed the verification—as Walter Charles Pleuthner. That’s odd. Elsewhere, I’ve seen him listed as Walter Carl Pleuthner. There is no reason to assume that these were different people, because his birthdate is cited correctly as January 24, 1885. He was 33 years old at the time of his draft registration, and was self-employed as an artist and architect, living on Scarsdale Avenue, in Scarsdale NY.

Pleuthner was born in Buffalo NY. When as young as five years old, he began to take art lessons at what is now the Buffalo AKG Art Museum. His watercolors were first exhibited in New York City in 1903. Three years later he moved to New York, where he worked in his uncle’s law firm, while taking art courses at the Art Students League and the Academy of Design. Among the instructors he studied with were Frank DuMond and F. Luis Mora. When the Armory Show (the infamous International Exhibition of Modern Art) took place in New York in 1913, he was the youngest artist to have his work included.

Later, as an architect, he was primarily known for designing homes for wealthy clients. In 1909, he married Clara Riopel Von Bott, a concert singer, and designed a spacious stately Tudor home for them in Scarsdale. It was of sufficient distinction that his full color painting of the property’s entrance gate, with a view of the home in the background, was featured on the cover of a 1909 issue of American Homes and Gardens magazine. In the magazine’s interior pages was a full page feature on the home, with exterior photographs, floor plans, and marginal notes.

Magazine Cover / Walter Pleuther / 1909
Magazine interior featuring Pleuthner home / 1909


Pleuthner is listed as having been a member of the Society of Independent Artists, as well as of a New York group called American Camouflage, organized by Barry Faulkner and Sherry Edmundson Fry (for the purpose of becoming proficient at army camouflage) in anticipation of the US declaration of war in 1917.

At some point, as a civilian, he also became involved in ship camouflage. We know this because there is a photograph of a painted wooden ship silhouette, credited to him, that was published in March 1918 (in black and white only) as part of a lengthy research report by the Submarine Defense Association. After his scheme was tested by camouflage researchers at Eastman Kodak Laboratories in Rochester NY, his camouflage proposal was not selected for actual use.

Pleuthner’s wife died from a heart ailment in 1957. He lived for thirteen additional years. His newspaper obituary reads: “His techniques ranged from American impressionism to the unusual use of found objects. He wrote humorous anecdotes and philosophical essays. An architect by profession, he created many of the Gothic and Tudor style homes in Scarsdale and neighboring towns.” He died on December 2, 1970.

The Pleuthners had no children. After his wife’s death, he continued to live alone in their large residence in Scarsdale (although it isn’t entirely clear if this was the original house from 1909, or perhaps a later equivalent from 1920). What is certain is that he had difficulty in maintaining the house. In 1963, it caught on fire, but was not structurally damaged. Soon after, it caught on fire on two other occasions, followed by vandalism and thefts. Concerns were increasingly voiced by area residents, fire safety officials and the village board. Some people urged that the house be condemned and dismantled “as a danger.” This debate provoked a longtime Pleuthner friend and former neighbor to publish an objection in the Scarsdale Inquirer on November 22, 1967.

“We all know Walter’s eccentricities,” the letter to the editor said, “and it is easy to criticize them. With less formal education than some, Walter, through his own efforts, became an excellent architect. He built expensive and admirable houses as far away as Pennsylvania and several in Westchester County…”

The request to raze the Pluethner’s home should be denied, the writer urged. “Walter has suffered several serious misfortunes and since Mrs. Pleuthner’s death, he has mostly lived alone with his paintings and sculpture. His house has suffered damage from fires but appears structurally sound. He is now an old man.”

One cannot help but wonder why Pleuthner was regarded as “eccentric,” even among his defenders and friends. One early indication may be a 1941 news article titled “Tipsy House” in the American Builder magazine. 

Tipsy House: No hurricane; just a bad spill

 

Pleuthner ran into unforessen difficulties, the article reported, “with a model house he bought, cut into two sections and tried to move to another site. After a lot of figuring, he started out at dawn one morning with the first section on a big trailer. Things went all right until they rounded a sharp curve on a hill. At that point the house got tipsy, rolled off the trailer and landed on its side. The house wasn’t damaged, but it got Architect Pleuthner into all sorts of trouble with various people, including the Traffic Department, who objected to having a main highway blocked. Thousands of people who had inspected the house [earlier] when it was known as the ‘Home for Better Living,’ sponsored by Westchester Lighting Company, were intrigued by the sight ot the house, complete with shutters, slate roof and equipment, laying on its side by the road, where it stayed for several days.”

But the straw that eventually broke the authorities’ back was the increasingly disheveled state of his large self-built Tudor home. At the time he built the house, we are told in an article in Progressive Architecture magazine, it “was no more pixyish than many another in the high Eclectic period, and was distinguished only by having true half-timber construction, a massive braced frame with brick nogging. Loving handmade things and solid workmanship, he had the house put together by craftsmen who used a minimal amount of millwork and ready-sawn lumber. One of the timbers in the living room is a heavy stick from the privateer Hornet of War of 1812 fame. Originally, the house reflected in a conventional way Pleuthner’s triple artistic role as architect, painter…and sculptor, as fragments of old ironwork and woodwork and paintings accumulated on the walls. The great living room was the rehearsal room of the Wayside Players, an amateur group that included Robert Benchley, Dorothy Parker, and the cartoonist Rollin Kirby. At some point, the cultured clutter to be expected in an artist’s house passed over into whimsy, and Pleuthner decided to work on the walls, ceilings, floors, and furnishings of the various interiors. The kitchen at one period was transformed into an Italian garden. Floorboards were painted to imitate polychromed tiles. Other floors were carved out and inlaid with mosaic. A bathroom scale had the outlines of two feet painted on the platform, while the dial became a screaming baby face. Unpleasant book bindings were painted white, with code words daubed on the spines in red. An automobile hood became a canopy over the entrance to a summer house. And more and more odds and ends were added inside and out. In 1963, the house caught fire, but its substantial construction saved it. …the house is now in sad shape. The authorities claim that it is unsafe, and want to tear it down, but Pleuthner is confident that he can restore it. This winter, the house was leaky, drafty, and uninhabitable, but Pleuthner is already experimenting with the textural effects created on the floor by the latest fire.”

Pleuthner home interior in 1968

 


When that article appeared in 1968, Walter Pleuthner was 82 years old. His home was condemned and soon after demolished near the end of that year. When he died two years later, he was listed as residing at a nursing home in White Plains.

SOURCES

• Cover and “A Handmade House, Walter Pleuthner, Architect,” in American Homes and Gardens. Vol IV No 6, June 1909, p. 78.
• “Tipsy House” in American Builder 1941-09: Vol 63 Issue 9, p. 87.
• Letters to the Editor, Harold A. Herriet, “Defends Walter Pleuthner” in Scarsdale Inquirer, Vol XLIV No 47, November 22, 1967.
• “Dwellings: The Rationales in their Design” in Progressive Architecture, May 1968.
• “Walter K. Pleuthner” [obituary], in Scarsdale Inquirer. Vol 52 No 49, December 10, 1970.