Henry Darger, throwaway boy The tragic life of an outsider artist

Jim Elledge, 1950-

Book - 2013

"Henry Darger was utterly unknown during his lifetime, keeping a quiet, secluded existence as a janitor on Chicago's North Side. When he died his landlord discovered a treasure trove of more than three hundred canvases and more than 30,000 manuscript pages depicting a rich, shocking fantasy world-many showing hermaphroditic children being eviscerated, crucified and strangled. While some art historians tend to dismiss Darger as an unhinged psychopath, in Henry Darger, Throw-Away Boy, Jim Elledge cuts through the cloud of controversy and rediscovers Darger as a damaged, fearful, gay man, raised in a world unaware of the consequences of child abuse or gay shame. This thoughtful, sympathetic biography tells the true story of a tragica...lly misunderstood artist. Drawn from fascinating histories of the vice-ridden districts of 1900s Chicago, tens of thousands of pages of primary source material, and Elledge's own work in queer history, the book also features a full-color reproduction of a never-before-seen canvas from a private gallery in New York, as well as a previously undiscovered photograph of Darger with his life-partner Whillie. Engaging and arresting, Henry Darger, Throw-Away Boy brings alive a complex, brave, and compelling man whose outsider art is both challenging and a triumph over trauma"--

Saved in:

2nd Floor Show me where

759.13/Darger
1 / 1 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 759.13/Darger Checked In
Subjects
Published
New York : Overlook Duckworth 2013.
Language
English
Main Author
Jim Elledge, 1950- (-)
Physical Description
396 pages : illustrations (chiefly color) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 355-386) and index.
ISBN
9781590208557
  • Acknowledgments
  • Preface
  • Introduction
  • Part I. One Boy's Life
  • 1. The Throwaway Boy
  • 2. Mercy
  • 3. The House of a Thousand Troubles
  • 4. Twenty Thousand Active Homosexuals
  • Part II. One Man's Art
  • 5. I Can't Be at All Left Out
  • 6. Even a Better Boy
  • 7. Angry at God
  • 8. I Lost All I Had
  • 9. The Saints and All the Angels Would Be Ashamed of Me
  • 10. Afterlife
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Prolific author and editor Elledge presents an extraordinarily compassionate and adventurously researched biography of the self-taught Chicago artist, Henry Darger, whose shocking paintings of tortured children led many to assume the worst about him. A solitary hospital janitor who attended church daily, he left behind, when he died in 1973, his secret, now world-famous life's work 30,000 pages of a rambling, fantasy-war epic illustrated by several hundred watercolors depicting the slaughter of children and the heroic, hermaphrodite Vivian Girls. Where did such gruesome and strange tales and images come from? Elledge unveils an appalling world of sexual predation and violence as he chronicles Darger's poverty-stricken childhood as a throwaway boy in one of Chicago's most notorious vice zones and in hellish institutions, including most inappropriately, given that he was bright, imaginative, and loved to read, the Illinois Asylum for Feeble-Minded Children. Furthermore, Elledge reveals that Darger was gay and forced to camouflage his long relationship with an older man. Drawing on his far-ranging investigation and keen psychological perception, Elledge poignantly and convincingly argues that the torture Darger depicted and his fantasies of revenge and rescue were cathartic responses to the traumas he suffered. Now, 40 years after Darger's death, justice is finally served in Elledge's gripping, humanizing, and haunting portrait of the artist as a wronged man.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Queer culture historian Elledge (Professional Writing Program/Kennesaw St. Univ.; H: Poems, 2012, etc.) provides a startling new perspective on a famous outsider artist. A reclusive dishwasher who spent his spare time writing sprawling novels and illustrating them with vivid drawings and collages, Henry Darger (18921973) has inspired equal amounts of praise, derision and horror. His epic work, In the Realms of the Unreal, depicts the adventures of the Vivian Girls, a group of child warriors who retaliate against the barbaric generals who torture, rape and kill innocent children. The graphic nature of the illustrations, along with the fact that the girls often appear naked and have male genitalia, has alternately fascinated and repulsed viewers. Some historians have accused Darger of pedophilia, and others have even suggested that his obsession with the disappearance and murder of a local girl indicate that he may have killed her (her murder was never solved). Elledge takes umbrage at these accusations and makes a case for Darger as a man who had himself been the victim of sexual abuse, both in the seedy Chicago neighborhood where he grew up and in the various institutions where he lived as an adolescent after his alcoholic father abandoned him. Elledge also claims that Darger's decadeslong relationship with William Schloeder was a romantic one, citing Darger's own oblique journal entries as well as research on gay culture in Chicago during the early 20th century. While Elledge has clearly conducted an impressive amount of research on Darger's milieu, the artist's own unwillingness to specify what actually happened to him during his years of institutionalization make the author's assertions speculative at best. He also fails to place Darger within the context of other 20th-century self-taught artists until the last few pages of the book, and he barely covers Darger's striking use of color and composition. The author's sociocultural agenda distorts a deeper understanding of the artist's oeuvre.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.