Richard Erdoes
Richard Erdoes was an American artist, photographer, illustrator and author.
Early life
Erdoes was born in Frankfurt, to Maria Josefa Schrom on July 7, 1912. His father, Richárd Erdős Sr., was a Jewish Hungarian opera singer who had died a few weeks earlier in Budapest on June 9, 1912. After his birth, his mother lived with her sister, the Viennese actress Leopoldine Sangora, He described himself as "equal parts Austrian, Hungarian and German, as well as equal parts Catholic, Protestant and Jew..."Career
He was a student at the Berlin Academy of Art in 1933, when Adolf Hitler came to power. He was involved in a small underground paper where he published anti-Hitler political cartoons which attracted the attention of the Nazi regime. He fled Germany with a price on his head. Back in Vienna, he continued his training at the Kunstgewerbeschule, now the University of Applied Arts, Vienna. He also wrote and illustrated children's books and worked as a caricaturist for Tag and Stunde, anti-Nazi newspapers. After the Anschluss of Austria in 1938 he fled again, first to Paris, where he studied at the Academie de la Grande Chaumiere, and then London, England before journeying to the United States. He married his first wife, fellow artist Elsie Schulhof in London, shortly before their arrival in New York City.In New York City, Erdoes enjoyed a long career as a commercial artist, and was known for his highly detailed, whimsical drawings. He created illustrations for such magazines as Stage, Fortune, Pageant, Gourmet, Harper's Bazaar, Sports Illustrated, The New York Times, Time, National Geographic and Life Magazine, where he met his second wife, Jean Sternbergh who was an art director there. The couple married in 1951 and had three children. Erdoes also illustrated many children's books.
An assignment for Life in 1967 took Erdoes to the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation for the first time, and marked the beginning of the work for which he would be best known. Erdoes was fascinated by Native American culture, outraged at the conditions on the reservation and deeply moved by the Civil Rights Movement that was raging at the time. He wrote histories, collections of Native American stories and myths, and wrote about such voices of the Native American Renaissance as Leonard and Mary Crow Dog and John Fire Lame Deer. The Erdoes' New York City apartment was a well known hub of the American Indian Movement in the early 1970s and he became involved in the legal defense of several AIM members. In 1975 the family moved to Santa Fe, New Mexico where Erdoes continued to write and remained active in the movement for Native American civil rights.
His papers are preserved at the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Yale University.
Works
As author:- Peddlers and Vendors Around the World
- Policemen Around the World
- Musicians Around the World
- The Sun Dance People: The Plains Indians, Their Past and Present
- The Rain Dance People: The Pueblo Indians, Their Past and Present
- The Woman Who Dared
- Saloons of the Old West
- The Native Americans: Navajos
- Native Americans: The Sioux
- Native Americans: The Pueblos
- The Richard Erdoes Illustrated Treasury of Classic Unlaundered Limericks
- A.D. 1000: Living on the Brink of Apocalypse
- Crying for a Dream: The World through Native American Eyes
- Tales from the American Frontier
- Legends and Tales of the American West
- The Cat and The Devil by James Joyce
- Come over to My House by Theo. LeSieg
- The Spotted Stones by Silvio Bedini
- Lame Deer, Seeker of Visions , with John Fire Lame Deer
- The Sound of Flutes and Other Indian Legends, with John Fire Lame Deer
- American Indian Myths and Legends, with Alfonso Ortiz
- Lakota Woman by Mary Crow Dog
- American Indian Trickster Tales, with Alfonso Ortiz
- Ojibwa Warrior: Dennis Banks and the Rise of the American Indian Movement, with Dennis Banks
- Ohitika Woman, with Mary Brave Bird
Honors and awards
- American Institute of Graphic Arts
- Viennese Museum of Applied Arts
- Art Directors Club of New York
- Society of Illustrators
- American Book Award, Before Columbus Foundation - for Lakota Woman
- Austrian [Cross of Honour for Science and Art]