555

Walter Inglis Anderson

American/Mississippi, 1903-1965

Walter Inglis Anderson
(American/Mississippi, 1903-1965)

"Soldiers on Horseback: Epic and Voyage Series", ca. 1941-1946

crayon on paper drawing
Matted, glazed and framed.
8-1/2" x 11", framed 18-1/2" x 19-3/4"

Literature: Sugg, Jr., Redding S., Illustrations of Epic and Voyage by Walter Anderson, Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1980; and Pinson, Patricia, ed., The Art of Walter Anderson, Jackson: University of Mississippi Press and The Walter Anderson Museum of Art, 2003.

Notes: A talented and creative artist, Walter Inglis Anderson saw himself as voyager, and kept meticulous journals and logs of his experiences and travels. Anderson struggled with mental illness for most of his adult life. During his years of hospitalization, he read extensively, especially classic literary tales of voyages and journeys. After escaping from Mississippi State Hospital in Whitfield, Anderson moved in with his mother in Jackson. In February of 1940, he left his mother's care and walked home to Ocean Springs, following the railroad tracks.
In April of the next year, his wife Sissy moved with their children to Oldfields to live with her parents at their large plantation home. Anderson joined them and enjoyed the comforts of family life. His daughter Mary recalls that time where "he gave generously of himself to his children, producing an abundance of work." While living at Oldfields from 1941 to 1946, he created ink, pencil and crayon drawings illustrating scenes of literary works including Homer, Coleridge, Shakespeare, Dante and Charles Darwin. By 1947, Anderson had returned to his cabin in Ocean Springs and focused primarily on painting watercolors of the landscape, animals and birds of the Mississippi gulf coast.

crayon on paper drawing
Matted, glazed and framed.
8-1/2" x 11", framed 18-1/2" x 19-3/4"

  • Literature: Sugg, Jr., Redding S., Illustrations of Epic and Voyage by Walter Anderson, Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1980; and Pinson, Patricia, ed., The Art of Walter Anderson, Jackson: University of Mississippi Press and The Walter Anderson Museum of Art, 2003.
  • Notes: A talented and creative artist, Walter Inglis Anderson saw himself as voyager, and kept meticulous journals and logs of his experiences and travels. Anderson struggled with mental illness for most of his adult life. During his years of hospitalization, he read extensively, especially classic literary tales of voyages and journeys. After escaping from Mississippi State Hospital in Whitfield, Anderson moved in with his mother in Jackson. In February of 1940, he left his mother's care and walked home to Ocean Springs, following the railroad tracks.
    In April of the next year, his wife Sissy moved with their children to Oldfields to live with her parents at their large plantation home. Anderson joined them and enjoyed the comforts of family life. His daughter Mary recalls that time where "he gave generously of himself to his children, producing an abundance of work." While living at Oldfields from 1941 to 1946, he created ink, pencil and crayon drawings illustrating scenes of literary works including Homer, Coleridge, Shakespeare, Dante and Charles Darwin. By 1947, Anderson had returned to his cabin in Ocean Springs and focused primarily on painting watercolors of the landscape, animals and birds of the Mississippi gulf coast.
  • Condition: **Drawing is float matted with all four edges visible. Some toning to the paper. No signs of past restorations. Light creases in upper right and lower left corners, paper imperfections upper left edge.
    Frame with some surface marks and abrasions.

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