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Virginia Lee Burton

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Virginia Lee Burton
BornAugust 30, 1909(1909-08-30)
Newton Centre, Massachusetts,United States
DiedOctober 15, 1968(1968-10-15)(aged 59)
Boston,Massachusetts
OccupationIllustrator, writer
GenreChildren'spicture books
Notable works
Notable awardsCaldecott Medal
1943

Virginia Lee Burton(August 30, 1909 – October 15, 1968), also known by her married nameVirginia Demetrios,was an Americanillustratorandchildren's bookauthor. She wrote and illustrated seven children's books, includingMike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel(1939) andThe Little House(1943), which won theCaldecott Medal.She also illustrated six books by other authors.

Burton founded the textile collectiveFolly Cove DesignersinCape Ann, Massachusetts,which had numerous museum exhibitions. Some of its members' works are held today in the collections of Boston'sMuseum of Fine Arts,thePeabody Essex MuseuminSalem, Massachusetts,theCape Ann Museum,and New York City'sMetropolitan Museum of Art.[1]

Biography

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Early life and education

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Virginia Burton[a]was born inNewton Centre, Massachusetts.As a child, she was called "Jinnee". Her mother was Lena Yates, a lyric poet and artist from England whose poetry was first published at age 20.[2]Yates later published children's books under the name Lena Dalkeith.[3]Later, she went by the monikerJeanne D'Orge.[3]Virginia Burton's father,Alfred Edgar Burton,married Lena Yates after he had been widowed with two sons.[3]Yates was 30 years his junior. They were married in 1906, having met on a walking trip in France. Notably, Burton's father served as the first Dean of Student Affairs for theMassachusetts Institute of Technology(1902-1921).[4]

Burton had an older sister, Christine, and younger brother, Alexander Ross Burton, in addition to their father's first two sons,Harold Hitz Burtonand Felix Arnold Burton.[3]She recounted their boisterous holiday celebrations, and singing, dancing and theatrical productions as children.[5]Harold became an attorney, politician andSupreme Court Justice;and Arnold an architect.[3]

When Burton was about 8 years old, her family moved toSan Diego, California,as the New England winters were hard on her mother's health. Her father, close to his retirement in 1921 after 40 years at MIT, took a leave of absence. A year later the family settled 450 miles north inCarmel-by-the-Sea,then a small, artistic community. Burton and her sister took dance and art lessons, performing in local productions.[5]Her parents divorced in 1925, and her father returned to Boston.

After attending local schools, Burton won a state scholarship to theCalifornia School of Fine Artsin San Francisco, where she studied both art and dance.[5]Living inAlamedaacross the bay while attending art school, she used the long commute by train, ferry boat and cable car "to train myself in making quick sketches from life and from memory of my unaware fellow passengers."[6]

Return to East Coast

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In 1928, after a year at art school, Burton moved to Boston, Massachusetts, where her father was living. It was also closer to her sister, by then a dancer in New York City, who invited Virginia to join her. Their father broke his leg, and Burton stayed in Boston to help him. She found work as a "sketcher" for theBoston Evening Transcript(now defunct). For two-and-a-half years, she worked under its drama and music critic. Portraying actors and other performers, she signed her drawings as "VleeB".[6]

In fall 1930, Burton enrolled in a Saturday morning drawing class taught by sculptor and artistGeorge Demetriosat theBoston Museum School.By spring, Burton and Demetrios artists were married.[7]For a year, the couple lived inLincoln,where their first sonAristides(called Ari) was born. They moved to the Folly Cove neighborhood ofGloucester.Their second son Michael was born in nearbyGrotonon Burton's birthday in 1935.[8]

Burton said her first published book,Choo Choo(1935), about ananthropomorphictrain engine, reflected strategy she learned from reactions to her first book, which was not published:

My first book,Jonnifer Lint,was about a piece of dust. I and my friends thought it was very clever but thirteen publishers disagreed with us and when I finally got the manuscript back and read it to Aris, age three and a half he went to sleep before I could even finish it. That taught me a lesson and from then on I worked with and for my audience, my own children. I would tell them the story over and over, watching their reaction and adjusting to their interest or lack of interest... the same with the drawings. Children are very frank critics.[6]

Burton was known for designing the whole work: design, illustration, typeface, and space.[9]She said first she made her drawings or preliminary sketches, then she wrote the story, as it came first to her in images. Her papers include the "numerous preparatory sketches, the reworking of illustrations that had not proven personally satisfactory to [her], and the demands for quality reproduction of the artwork [that] indicate her meticulous attention to detail." Her books were known for their themes of "importance of teamwork, environmental awareness, perseverance, and adapting to change while still recognizing the importance of the past."[9]

In 1941, Burton founded the textile collective,Folly Cove Designers,inCape Ann, Massachusetts,and designed some of the textiles. Its works were included in arts and crafts exhibitions of the 1940s and 1950s. It reflected the earlierArts and Crafts Movementof the 19th century, "both in its union of design and production and in the formation as a cooperative guild. The linoleum block print designs for domestic items were innovative and unique, bringing recognition and accolades to the group."[2]The group sold some of their textiles to major retailers such asLord & Taylor,F. Schumacher,Rich's of AtlantaandSkinner Silks.[2]

The collective had 16 museum exhibitions[2]and some of their works are held in the collections of Boston'sMuseum of Fine Arts,thePeabody Essex MuseuminSalem,and New York City'sMetropolitan Museum of Art.[1]

Burton died on October 15, 1968, oflung cancer.[10]

Sons

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Aristides Burton Demetrioswas a sculptor of figurative and abstract works, ranging from large public commissions to private pieces for gardens. Aristides died December 12, 2021, in Santa Barbara, California, at the age of 89.

Michael Burton Demetrioswas a businessman, leadingMarine World Africain its numerous locations in the United States. Since 1998 he had been president ofIntra-Asia,a US company with two amusement parks in China and plans for five additional. Michael died August 5, 2016, in Orlando, Florida.

Awards and legacy

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Works

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Houghton Mifflinpublished the seven books which Burton wrote and illustrated:[10]

  • Choo Choo(1937);ISBN0-395-47942-8
  • Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel(1939);ISBN0-590-75803-9
  • Calico the Wonder Horse, or the Saga of Stewy Stinker(1941); reissued 1997
Burton said she wrote the comic-strip-formatCalico"for both Aris and Mike [her children] in an attempt to wean them away from comic books."[12]
Burton said the house of the title "was based on our own little house which we moved from the street into 'a field of daises with apple trees growing around.'"[12]
Burton based the book's city of Geoppolis and its highway department onGloucester.[12]
Burton said this book reflected "my school days in San Francisco."[12]
Burton presents the history of the world, from Big Bang to her present day, as a theater production.[12]Updated on 2009.

Illustrated by Burton

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  • Cape Ann Historical Association,Folly Cove Designers: a Retrospective,exhibit June 27 through September 7, 1982.[2]
  • An animated short film was produced ofMike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel,directed byMichael Sporn,narrated by stand-up comedianRobert Kleinand first aired by HBO in 1990.
  • Christine Lundberg and Rawn Fulton made a documentary film,Virginia Lee Burton: a Sense of Place(2007), Red Dory Productions (Gloucester, Massachusetts) in partnership with Searchlight Films (Bernardston, Massachusetts).[2]
  • Sinikka Nogelo made a documentary film,Folly Cove Designers,produced by WNEC (Gloucester).[2]
  • Walt Disney Pictures released a special cartoon of "The Little House" in 1952, directed byWilfred Jackson,and narrated by voice actorSterling Holloway.[13]
  • Robert J. Bradshaw,Suite No. 3, "Katy and the Big Snow",was commissioned in 2009 by the Cape Ann Symphony, which premiered it that year.[14]
  • A local community effort inLanesville,Gloucester is working on the reconstruction of the original Little House. Completion is scheduled for Fall 2018.
  • An animated adaptation ofChoo Choo: The Story of a Little Engine Who Ran Awaywas seen inShelley Duvall's Bedtime Storiesand was narrated by country singerBonnie Raitt.

Notes

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  1. ^Burton added the middle name later on the advice of her High School principal.
    Cech, John (editor),Dictionary of Literary Biographies: American Writers for Children, 1900-1960,Gale Research, 1983, volume 22, pp. 88.

References

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  1. ^abcKilleen, Wendy (November 18, 2007)."Writer Remembered".The Boston Globe.Archivedfrom the original on June 28, 2011.
  2. ^abcdefg"Virginia Lee Burton",Gloucester Lyceum & Sawyer Free Library
  3. ^abcdeBarbara Elleman,Virginia Lee Burton: A Life in Art,Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2002, pp. 7-9
  4. ^MIT History: Office of the MIT Dean for Undergraduate Education and Student Affairs,Library, MIT, 1995-last updated 2013
  5. ^abcBurton, Virginia Lee (n.d.)."Childhood".Houghton Mifflin Company.Archivedfrom the original on June 5, 2011.RetrievedFebruary 28,2012.
  6. ^abcBurton,"Early Years",Houghton Mifflin.ArchivedJune 5, 2011, at theWayback Machine.
  7. ^Burton,Burton, "Folly Cove",Houghton Mifflin.ArchivedJune 5, 2011, at theWayback Machine.
  8. ^"Virginia Lee Burton: Aris & Mike",Houghton Mifflin.ArchivedJune 5, 2011, at theWayback Machine.
  9. ^abcJason Buchanan,Virginia Lee Burton: A Sense of Place(2007),Rovi, at Rotten Tomatoes, accessed 3 February 2014
  10. ^abOrtakales, Denise (n.d.)."Women Children's Book Illustrators: Virginia Lee Burton (1909–1968)".Ortakales.com (fan site).
  11. ^"Caldecott Medal Winners, 1938 - Present".Association for Library Service to Children.RetrievedFebruary 28,2012.
  12. ^abcde"Books by Virginia Lee Burton".Houghton Mifflin Company. n.d.RetrievedFebruary 28,2012.
  13. ^Disney A-Z: "The Little House,website
  14. ^Katy and the Big Snow,website

Further reading

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  • Cape Ann Historical Association,Folly Cove Designers,1996.
  • Elleman, Barbara.Virginia Lee Burton: A Life in Art,Boston: Houghton Mifflin, 2002,ISBN0-618-00342-8
  • Elleman, Barbara.Those Telling Lines: the Art of Virginia Lee Burton,Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art (Amherst, Mass.), 2009.
  • Sarni, Elena M.Trailblazing Women Printmakers; Virginia Lee Burton Demetrius and the Folly Cove Designers,Princeton Architectural Press (NY) 2023. ISBN 978-1-7972-2428-2
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