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Zhenya Gay

American author and illustrator From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Zhenya Gay (born Eleanor F. Byrnes) (September 16, 1901[1] – August 3, 1978) was an American writer and illustrator, best known for her children's books.

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Early life and education

Eleanor Byrnes was born in 1906 in Norwood, Massachusetts, the daughter of Charles W. Byrnes and Alice Bell Smith Byrnes.[1] She attended Columbia University, where she studied with Solon Borglum and Winold Reiss.[2]

Career

As a young woman, Gay created movie posters, newspaper advertisements, and costume designs for theater productions.[2] She spent several years traveling and living in Europe, Mexico, and Central America.[3] Her illustrations for The Poems of Catullus (1933) "caught the bacchanalian decadence" of the texts, according to one reviewer.[4] In 1954, she left New York City for the Catskill Mountains,[2] and lived on a farm in Saugerties, New York.[5] In addition to her book illustrations, Gay also created standalone artworks, including aquatints, lithographs, and etchings, and wrote poetry and stories for children, often featuring animal characters, especially cats.[6][7]

In 1941 Gay appeared as "guest story teller" at a children's library in Springfield, Massachusetts.[8] She spoke at the Greenville Public Library in South Carolina in 1956.[9] In 1961, she met with an audience of children at the Napa County Library in California.[5]

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Selected works

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Gay's works are held in the permanent collections of several museums, including the University of Michigan Museum of Art, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco,[10] and the Seattle Art Museum.[11] The Kerlan Collection at the University of Minnesota holds much of her work,[2] as does the de Grummond Children's Literature Collection at the University of Southern Mississippi.[2]

As author and illustrator

  • Pancho and His Burro (1930)
  • The Shire Colt (1931, with Jan Gay)[12]
  • Town Cats (1932, with Jan Gray)[13]
  • Sakimura (1936)[14][15]
  • Whistlers' Van (1937)
  • Manuelito of Costa Rica (1940 with Pachita Crespi)[8][16]
  • Look! (1952)[3]
  • Jingle Jangle (1953)[17]
  • Wonderful Things! (1954)[18]
  • Bits & Pieces (1958)[19]
  • Small One (1958)[20]
  • The Dear Friends (1959)[21]
  • The Nicest Time of Year (1960)[22]
  • I'm Tired of Lions (1961)[23]
  • Who's Afraid? (1965)[24]

As illustrator

  • Anatole France, The Crimes of Sylvestre Bonnard (1931, translated by Lafcadio Hearn)[25]
  • The Poems of Catullus (1933, translated by Horace Gregory)[26]
  • Frances Clarke Sayers, Mr. Tidy Paws (1936)[27]
  • Oscar Wilde, The Ballad of Reading Gaol (1937)[28]
  • Agnes Fisher, Once upon a time; folk tales, myths and legends of the United Nations (1943)[29]
  • Christine Von Hagen, Chico of the Andes (1943)[30]
  • Arkady Gaidar, Timur and his Gang (1943, translated by Zina Voynow)[31]
  • Irving R. Melbo, Young neighbors in South America (1944)[32]
  • Irma Simonton Black, Toby, a Curious Cat (1948)[33]
  • Alfred Lewis, Treasure in the Andes (1952)[34]
  • Joseph E. Chipperfield, Beyond the Timberland Trail (1953)[35]
  • Miriam E. Mason, The Major and His Camels (1953)[36]
  • Miriam E. Mason, The Sugarbush Family (1954)[37][38]

Personal life

From 1927 until the 1940s, Gay was in a relationship with Jan Gay (born Helen Reitman, daughter of Ben Reitman), a children's book writer and sexuality researcher.[39] Zhenya Gay died in 1978, at the age of 76.[2]

References

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