Rudolph F. Zallinger
Born
Rudolph Franz Zallinger

12 November 1919
Died1 August 1995 (aged 75)
Resting placeGrove Street Cemetery, New Haven, Connecticut, U.S.
NationalityAmerican, Russian
EducationYale School of Art
University of New Haven
Known forPainting, educator
Notable workThe Age of Reptiles (1947)
Great Seattle Fire (1953)
March of Progress
(1965)
The Age of Mammals (1967)
Early History of Hartford (1986)
StyleFresco-secco
Spouse
Jean Farquharson Day
(m. 1941)
AwardsPulitzer Fellowship (1949)
Addison Emery Verrill Medal (1980)
James Frances Bent award (1988)[1]

Rudolph Franz Zallinger (German pronunciation: [ˈru:dɔlf ˈtsa:lɪŋɐ];[2] November 12, 1919 – August 1, 1995) was an American-based Austrian-Russian artist. His most notable works include his mural The Age of Reptiles (1947) at Yale University's Peabody Museum of Natural History, and the March of Progress (1965) with numerous parodies and versions. His painting of a Tyrannosaurus heavily influenced the creature design of Toho Studios' Godzilla (1954). Two of Zallinger's dinosaurs—the T. rex and Brontosaurusare seen in that film as part of a slide demonstration during a lecture in the National Diet Building.

Born in Russia, he was raised in Seattle and became a prominent member of Yale University after painting his murals, gaining him awards and honors. He made illustrations for Life magazine and illustrations for dinosaur books, which made more people aware of his mural work. Because of the time in which they were painted, his murals have errors that are noticeable today but still remain a large achievement in his life.

Early life and education

Rudolph Franz Zallinger was born in Irkutsk, Siberia in 1919 to Siberian refugees, Franz Xavier Zallinger and Maria Maria (Koncheravich) Zallinger. Zallinger had one sister. His family immigrated to Seattle, Washington in 1924.[3]

Zallinger graduated at the Queen Anne High School in 1937.[4] In 1938, he won a scholarship at Yale University when he was urged to apply by John Butler, an artist from Seattle. He graduated in 1942 with a Bachelor of Fine Arts. He later got a Master of Fine Arts at the Yale university in 1971, and a Doctor of Fine Arts at the University of New Haven, in 1980.[5]

Career

The same year Zallinger graduated from Yale University, he worked as a teacher in painting in Yale School of Fine Arts from 1942 to 1950 where he would paint his famous The Age of Reptiles. He worked as an instructor for 5 years, and then 2 more until 1950 as an assistant professor. In 1950, he went back to Seattle to work as a freelance artist and taught at Burnley School (now called The Art Institute of Seattle) for 3 years before returning to Yale again after accepting a commission by Life Magazine to create The Age of Mammals.[5] Once he returned, the museum appointed him as the "artist-in-residence", a position he held until his death.[6] He also enrolled as a Fellow in Geology to study for his next work.[5]

From 1961 to his death, he worked in the University of Hartford in Connecticut, during which he worked on the mural of The Age of Mammals and received the James E. and Frances W. Bent Award from that university. He continued to work on other projects, such as his Early History of Hartford.

Paintings and drawings

The Age of Reptiles (1947)

Perhaps Zallinger's most well-known piece of art, The Age of Reptiles is a 110 feet (34 meters) wide by 16 feet (4.9 meters) tall mural, occupying the full length of the east wall of the Yale Peabody Museum's Great Hall. It was painted from 1943 to 1947, with the help of a 6-month crash course in animal and plant life of the distant past and comparative anatomy with Yale's professors. Such professors include Carl Owen Dunbar (the Director of the Peabody Museum at Yale University, 1942–1959), Richard Swann Lull, G. Edward Lewis, and George Wieland.[7] It features a timeline of 350 million years of animal and plant evolution, showing the rise and fall of dinosaurs as the rulers of Earth. Zallinger used trees to divide it into the various periods of geologic time, as the chronology moves from right to left. This was later reversed when used in the Life Magazine to go from left to right in 1952.

The museum's Great Hall had the fossil reconstructions of various dinosaurs, including that of an Apatosaurus with an incorrect skull.[7] However, the wall looked too empty for oceanographer and director of the Peabody Museum of Natural History (1938–1942), Albert Eide Parr. He wanted to make a series of small paintings on the East wall, depicting what those skeletons would have looked like. In 1941, Parr decided to put the task to Zallinger, a student at Yale University at the time who had been painting marine algae for him.[8][9] Lewis York, an art professor at the School of Fine Arts, also suggested that Zallinger would be up to the task.[7] Along with this, his wife is quoted as saying:

"We were in the art school, and he'd done some drawings of seaweed for Albert Parr, head of the Peabody Museum of Natural History. When Parr was looking for a design to put on the wall, an art professor told him to use the guy who did his seaweed."[8]

In 1942, Zallinger was hired to do this work, but he proposed to do a large-scale mural, rather than small individual painting, yielding a panoramic timeline. He spent 6 months doing research, then created a sketch nearly 7 feet (2.1 meters) long, quite similar to the finished result. He then coloured it and added details, which took him nearly a year, and used egg tempera. In 1943, he began his drawing of the mural, using charcoal. He painted it using the fresco-secco technique,[9][10] most often used in the 15th century. The underpainting was finished in 1944, and the mural finally completed in June 1947.[7] A portion of the mural appeared on a United States postage stamp in 1970.[11]

Great Seattle Fire (1953)

A 10 feet high by 24 feet wide (3 by 7.3 meters) mural was commissioned by General Insurance Company of America (SAFECO) in 1953. The mural depicts the Great Seattle Fire which occurred on June 6, 1889. Zallinger spent a long time researching and studying historic photos and their every detail to capture the moment of that fire. The painting was unveiled in 1953, at the Museum of History & Industry, with 50 surviving witnesses and 100 other curious visitors at the event.[4] It was intended to celebrate the first anniversary of the opening of the Museum of History & Industry. In the painting, the artist's perspective was from the intersection of Yesler Way, 1st Avenue, and James Street, in what is now Pioneer Square, looking east up steep Yesler Hill.[12]

March of Progress (1965)

The March of Progress (as it's commonly called, although titled "The Road to Homo Sapiens") was created for the Early Man volume for the Life Nature Library, published in 1965 by Time Life. It shows the evolution of man, from ape to Homo Sapiens. Many consider this to be wrong as it presents a "linear evolution", whereas evolution is much more complex, and thus has been heavily criticized despite making its way into popular culture. Many parodies have been made, as it stands as one of the most recognizable scientific images of all time.[13]

The Age of Mammals (1967)

As Zallinger had previously done work for Life magazine, they commissioned another work of art from him, The Age of Mammals. The drawing for The Age of Mammals was published in October 1953, but there were insufficient funds to begin work on the mural until the 1960s. In 1961, Zallinger began work on the 60 by 5.5 feet (18.3 by 1.7 meters) mural[14][15] on the south wall of the Hall of Mammalian Evolution in Yale's Peabody Museum of Natural History.[9] Its chronology moves from right to left, and it depicts a variety of plants, animals and landscapes of western North America in the span of 65 million years. It shows the domination of mammals after the extinction of dinosaurs 65 million years ago to the Ice age about 10,000 years ago. It was painted using the fresco-secco technique.[15]

Early History of Hartford (1986)

A mural made in Zallinger's later life, it depicts the history of Hartford, Connecticut, from the landing of Puritan colonial leader Thomas Hooker in Connecticut, to around the time Zallinger had been born. It depicts people helping build the city, but forgets to display the enslaved black men and woman who also helped build it.[16] It is on permanent display at Hartford Public Library on the main floor.[16]

Life magazine

The Age of Reptiles earned Zallinger recognition from the Pulitzer Foundation in 1949 but remained unknown to most of America. It wasn't until New Haven's former mayor Richard C. Lee, at that time head of the Yale News Bureau, who brought it to the attention of the editors of Life magazine. Soon after, it was published in Life in 1952, which gained it much attention.[17] However, this wasn't the only assignment Zallinger received from Life. He paintings portrayed reptiles and dinosaurs, he painted 8 pages of the tropical rain forests of Dutch Guiana, drew animals and birds with his wife Jean Day Zallinger, recreated scenes of Minoans in ancient Crete, contributed to illustrations in the series "The World We Live In", "Wonders of Life on Earth", 2 of the 12 chapters in "The Epic of Man", illustrated a series on the Russian Revolution, and many others.[5]

Other books

Zallinger's artistic talent was apparent and he offered to do book cover work. He worked with authors Willy Ley (1906–1969) and Frank H. T. Rhodes. He first illustrated Ley's book, Worlds of the Past, published in 1971.[18] The book talks about various life forms around the world and the science behind them based on the studies of paleontologists. The cover features 3 dinosaurs. Rhodes's book, Evolution, was published in 1974 and was illustrated by Zallinger and Rebecca A. Merrilees (1922–2012).[19] He also illustrated the book "Dinosaurs" for Golden Press in 1960.[20]

Awards and honors

Zallinger's first award was an honorable mention for the Prix-de-Rome in 1941. After finishing the mural of The Age of Reptiles, in 1947, he received the Pulitzer Award for Painting in 1949.[5] He received the Addison Emery Verrill Medal for "outstanding contributions to the field of natural history," which was presented to him by A. Bartlett Giamatti (then president of Yale University) at a ceremony in the Great Hall on February 29, 1980. He was the first non-scientist to receive this medal.[9] He was also given Doctor of Fine Arts by the university. The inscription reads:

"Rudolph Franz Zallinger, artist and teacher, your great natural history murals at the Peabody Museum are a fusion of scientific accuracy and artistic genius. Guided by your own diligent research and painstaking collaboration with scientists, your imagination has allowed us a glimpse into past worlds no human eye ever witnessed. It was your innovation to blend the static frames of successive geologic ages into grand panoramas that sweep through time, capturing the dynamic force of life as it evolved."[9][21]

At 69 years old (1988), Zallinger received the James E. and Frances W. Bent Award, which is given annually to a faculty member of the University of Hartford for "unusual creativity and innovation in the pursuit of his or her scholarship".[1]

Family

While studying at Yale, he met the artist and illustrator Jean Farquharson Day (1918–2007). They married on September 27, 1941, and had three children, all artists: Kristina Zallinger (1945–), Lisa Day Zallinger (1949–), and Peter Franz Zallinger (1943–).[20] Zallinger's wife was an American artist and children's book illustrator for dozens of books.[22]

Death

Rudolph Zallinger died on August 1, 1995, of cancer[8] in Branford, Connecticut.

References

  1. 1 2 "Calls for Nominations: Bent, Larsen, and Trachtenberg Awards" (PDF). University of Hartford. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2015-10-09.
  2. "Automatic Phonemic Transcriber". tom.brondsted.dk. Retrieved 2019-08-31.
  3. "Legacy.com - Wanda Zallinger Wells". Legacy.com.
  4. 1 2 "Rudolph Zallinger and the Great Seattle Fire Mural". www.historylink.org. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Rudolph Franz Zallinger". Yale Peabody Museum: Collections : Archives. Archived from the original on October 24, 2020. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  6. Wallace, D.R. (2004). Beasts of Eden. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-23731-5.
  7. 1 2 3 4 Creating the Mural - Rudolph Zallinger's masterpiece,"The Age of Reptiles", archived from the original on 2021-12-14, retrieved 2019-08-28
  8. 1 2 3 "Obituaries | Rudolph Zallinger's Art Evolved Like Ancient Landscapes He Drew | Seattle Times Newspaper". community.seattletimes.nwsource.com. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 "The Zallinger Murals | Archives : Collections : Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History". peabody.yale.edu. 2010-11-08. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  10. The age of reptiles: the art and science of Rudolph Zallinger's great dinosaur mural at Yale - Rosemary (ed.). p. 63.
  11. "1970 U.S. Postage Stamp Issues". 1847us.com. 2011. Retrieved 25 March 2012.
  12. "Mural of 1889 Seattle Fire painted by Rudolph Franz Zallinger, 1953". digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  13. Blake, Kevin (2018-12-17). "On the Origins of "The March of Progress"". Washington University ProSPER. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  14. "The Age of Mammals Mural | Store : Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History". peabody.yale.edu. 2012-09-14. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  15. 1 2 "The Age of Mammals Mural | Exhibits : Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History". peabody.yale.edu. 2010-11-29. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  16. 1 2 "Those Missing Faces | Hartford History Center at Hartford Public Library". Retrieved 2019-08-27.
  17. "Yale Environmental News" (PDF). Spring 2007.
  18. Ley, Willy (1971). Worlds of the Past. Golden Press. ISBN 978-0-307-16826-9.
  19. Rhodes, Frank Harold Trevor (1974-01-01). Evolution. Golden Press. ISBN 978-0-307-64360-5.
  20. 1 2 "Rudolph Zallinger, Scientific Muralist, Dies at 75". The New York Times. Associated Press. 1995-08-02. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2019-08-28.
  21. Adapted from "An Interview with Rudolph F. Zallinger," by Lee Grimes, 1975. Discovery 11(1):33–35.
  22. "Zallinger, Jean. - Social Networks and Archival Context". snaccooperative.org. Retrieved 2019-09-01.
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