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Crisell collection on Paul Landacre

 Collection
Identifier: MS.2020.009

Scope and Contents

This finding aid describes the Paul Landacre collection formed by Robert and Toni Crisell and includes a wide variety of the artist's wood cut prints and related drawings, as well as published examples of his wor, and works about him, such as exhibition catalogs. Prints collected by the Crisells include not just editioned prints, but preliminary proofs and progressive trial prints. Research files compiled by collector Patricia Adler Ingram, whose Landacre collection the Crisells acquired, include a significant amount of correspondence about Landacre with his printer colleagues and friends.

The Crisell collection is also enumerated in the finding aid to the Clark Library's Paul Landacre Collection, which has been compiled over time through various donations and purchases.

Dates

  • Creation: 1928-2020

Creator

Access to Collection

Collection is open for research; access requires at least 24 hours advance notice.

Publication Rights

The Clark Library owns the property rights to its collections but does not hold the copyright to these materials and therefore cannot grant or deny permission to use them. Researchers are responsible for determining the copyright status of any materials they may wish to use, investigating the owner of the copyright, and obtaining permission for their intended publication or other use. In all cases, you must cite the Clark Library as the source with the following credit line: The William Andrews Clark Memorial Library, University of California, Los Angeles.

Biographical Note

Paul Hambleton Landacre was born in Columbus, OH, on 9 July 1893. He attended Ohio State University where he was a track and field athlete with dreams of participating in the Olympics. During his sophomore year, he contracted a streptococcus infection that caused permanent damage to his right leg and meant the end of his running career. After a long convalescence, he left the midwest for San Diego, where his father and stepmother had settled, and found work as a commercial illustrator at an advertising firm where he met his future wife, copywriter Margaret McCreery. Margaret Gertrude McCreery had been born in Missouri in 1891, but by the early 1910s had also relocated to San Diego with her parents and siblings.

Around 1923, Margaret moved to Los Angeles to further her career, and Paul soon followed. They married in 1925 and settled in the Edendale neighborhood of Los Angeles, in a house on El Moran Avenue where they would live for the rest of their lives. Landacre enrolled in some drawing courses at the Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles, but he largely taught himself the craft of printmaking. In 1929, Margaret introduced Paul and his work to Jake Zeitlin, the Los Angeles bookseller for whom she worked at the time, and Zeitlin became an important early champion of Paul and his artwork. Through Zeitlin, Landacre also met Delmer Daves, another significant supporter and friend. During the 1930s, Landacre produced editions of single prints, in addition to working on book and magazine illustration. He also received some income from the Landacre Association, a subscription scheme organized by Zeitlin and Daves. Increasing commissions for book illustrations drew his attention away from art prints during the 1940s. The most notable books containing his work are California Hills (1931), The Boar and Shibboleth (1933), five books by Donald Culross Peattie (1939-1953), Tales of Soldiers and Civilians (1943), De Rerum Natura (1957), and On the Origin of Species (1963). From 1953 until his death he taught a course at Otis Art Institute.

Over the course of their lives together, Margaret played an instrumental role in Paul's career, continuing to work outside their home in addition to working behind the scenes to organize his business affairs and running their household (which included a succession of bulldogs). In 1963 Margaret McCreery Landacre died of cancer, and four weeks later, Paul Landacre died of injuries sustained in an attempt to take his own life.

Extent

6 boxes (8 linear feet)

Language of Materials

English

Abstract

The Paul Landacre collection formed by Robert and Toni Crisell consists of the artist's prints and related drawings, published examples of his work, exhibition catalogs and other works about Landacre, and research files compiled by researcher Patricia Adler Ingram.

Organization of the Collection

This collection is organized into 3 series:

  1. Prints, Proofs, and Drawings
  2. Published Work
  3. Research Files, Realia, and Posthumous Publications

Provenance

Gift, Robert and Toni Crisell, 2020.

Related Materials

Paul Landacre Collection, Press coll. Archives Landacre, UCLA William Andrews Clark Memorial Library.

Processing History

This collection was physically processed and described in 2022 by Rebecca Fenning Marschall. The entire Crisell collection is also included in the finding aid to the Clark Library's Paul Landacre Collection, which seeks to describe all Landacre materials at the Clark, for the ease of researchers.

Title
Crisell Collection on Paul Landacre
Status
Completed
Author
Rebecca Fenning Marschall
Date
2022
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin

Repository Details

Part of the William Andrews Clark Memorial Library Repository

Contact:
2520 Cimarron Street
Los Angeles 90018 USA us
(310) 794-5155