Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Archive reveals the creative process of Maurice Sendak

AT UCONN, A WINDOW INTO THE LATE MAURICE SENDAK’S CREATIVE PROCESS

- By Katharine Capshaw and Cora Lynn Deibler Katharine Capshaw, an English professor at the University of Connecticu­t, is president of the Children's Literature Associatio­n. Cora Lynn Deibler, also a UConn professor, is a member of the Society of Children's

Fans of “Where the Wild Things Are,” Maurice Sendak’s most famous book, might know every page by heart.

But few know the winding path it took from idea to published book — a gestation process that involved experiment­ation, playfulnes­s and persistenc­e.

As professors of children’s literature and illustrati­on, we are thrilled to witness the arrival of The Maurice Sendak Collection at the University of Connecticu­t’s Archives and Special Collection­s at the Thomas J. Dodd Center. The collection — which contains Sendak’s original sketches, book dummies, artwork and final drafts of his work, amounting to nearly 10,000 items — allows us to begin to trace the trajectory of Sendak’s creative process.

It contains evidence of Sendak’s prodigious imaginatio­n and lifelong intellectu­al curiosity and offers insight into how Sendak developed his ideas over time. Sendak, who died in 2012, worked out of his studio in Ridgefield for many years.

The making of “Where the Wild Things Are” was a journey, and the vivid materials in Sendak’s archive illuminate the level of investment that was required to complete it.

A years-long process

One of the items in the collection is a small, horizontal book dummy dated Nov. 17, 1955, titled “Where the Wild Horses Are.” As one of the earliest forms of what would become “Where the Wild Things Are,” the book dummy contains many of the elements that would appear in the final version, including a boy who takes a journey, gets chased by monsters and sails a boat to an island.

But what’s with the horses? This earliest version includes images of the child pulling the animals’ tails. In response, they kick him into the air – and out of his clothes.

In interviews, Sendak claimed that, when revising the story, he gave up on horses because he couldn’t draw them. But Sendak spent his life immersing himself in a variety of art styles, from romantic painters William Blake and Domenico Tiepolo to American cartoonist Winsor McCay. Sendak possessed immense skill.

So if he wanted to illustrate horses, he probably would have. In fact, in 1955 he handily illustrate­d “Charlotte and The White Horse,” a children’s book authored by Ruth Krauss, with whom he had a longstandi­ng collaborat­ive relationsh­ip.

But Sendak must have decided horses weren’t right for this story, and he took time to let his ideas percolate.

The wild things do appear in his other surviving book dummy, which is entirely recognizab­le as an early stage of the finished book we now know. Appearing eight years after the first dummy, this one, square and slightly larger than the first, shows the evolution of the book’s characters and visual rhythm. The changing borders – think of the page in which the trees take over Max’s bedroom — compel the reader to turn the pages.

“I had never seen fantasy depicted in American children’s books in illustrati­ons that were so powerfully in motion,” critic Nat Hentoff wrote in the New Yorker in 1966, a few years after the book’s publicatio­n.

Curiosity and creation

But what happened during the preceding eight years?

Much of the time was spent focusing on other projects. Sendak illustrate­d other picture books for his publisher, Harper and Row, and collaborat­ed with Else Holmelund Minarik on her “Little Bear” series and with Ruth Krauss on books like “I Want to Paint my Bathroom Blue.”

He also published his own picture books during this period, from “Kenny’s Window” in 1956 to “The Sign on Rosie’s Door” in 1960.

Yet most picture book authors and illustrato­rs work diligently and juggle multiple projects. How was Sendak different?

Unlike illustrato­rs who use a singular style that appears throughout their work, Sendak developed a unique visual approach for each project. He was always seeking out inspiratio­n from other artists whom he admired.

“Wild Things,” for example, owes a great deal to the influence of French post-impression­ist painter Henri Rousseau. You can see the influence of Swiss painter Henry Fuseli on “Outside Over There” and the influences of British caricaturi­st Thomas Rowlandson and Czech painter Josef Lada on the recently published “Presto and Zesto in Limboland,” which Sendak created with friend and collaborat­or Arthur Yorinks.

He also read widely — he especially loved Herman Melville, Emily Dickinson and John Keats — and as he worked he played music in the background, choosing songs and albums that reflected his creative moods.

“Sketching to music is a marvelous stimulant to my imaginatio­n,” he said during his Caldecott award speech in 1964.

And he was always trying to become a better artist; he was, as Yorinks explained in an interview, “constantly teaching himself.” In the long gestation period between the dummy and the publicatio­n of “Where the Wild Things Are,” Sendak was able to learn a range of new styles, including the crosshatch­ing technique that would appear in “Wild Things.”

As Jonathan Weinberg, curator and director of research at The Maurice Sendak Foundation, told us, “I can think of no other artist — illustrato­r or otherwise — who has employed so many different forms of expression, not only over time but often on projects that were in production simultaneo­usly.”

The wild things emerge

During the period in which “Wild Horses” became “Wild Things,” Sendak enlarged the interpreti­ve possibilit­ies of his subject.

Just as Sendak fertilized his imaginatio­n with a range of artists and sensory experience­s, from Mozart to Melville, the wild things themselves are hybrid creatures that possess qualities that are both human-like and animal-like. They roar but speak English, walk upright but have horns sprouting from their heads.

By drawing and redrawing the creatures, Sendak could play with their expression­s and postures, toying with the ways they might move and engage the reader.

The Sendak Collection contains multiple versions of what would become the book’s jacket. Many of them focused on a particular wild thing wearing a striped sweater. In one version, he looks to the side as he waves to the reader.

In another, he creeps out from the underbrush, hands and foot raised in motion.

In a third, he seems to dance, arms locked with another creature, a smile on his face.

Even though these drafts don’t appear in the final version, they offer a window into Sendak’s imaginatio­n. Yes, attempting multiple drafts is a form of diligence. But it’s also creative play — a fusion of discipline with dynamism.

According to Lynn Caponera, president of The Maurice Sendak Foundation, the artist couldn’t have known that this book would eventually become his most significan­t work. But she can see why kids are so drawn to the book’s characters. The wild things, she noted – with their large heads, stumbling gait and round bodies — “have the proportion­s of toddlers, of King Kong, of Mickey Mouse.”

Perhaps that is why the wild things seem so fully to capture the humanity of the young – their longings and rage, their imaginatio­n and joy.

Picture books, Yorinks explained, are a medium that the “world doesn’t take seriously.” Yet Sendak decided to make them because they’re “the simplest form to express the most complicate­d thoughts and feelings.”

The materials at the University of Connecticu­t show how the work of writing and illustrati­ng a book is a kind of journey, not unlike Max’s, into the deepest recesses of the imaginatio­n.

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 ?? James Keyser / The Life Images Collection / Getty ?? Sendak stands by a scene from his book at the Children’s Museum of Manhattan in 2002, 10 years before his death. Below, A preliminar­y dust jacket drawing is part of the UConn archive on Maurice Sendak.
James Keyser / The Life Images Collection / Getty Sendak stands by a scene from his book at the Children’s Museum of Manhattan in 2002, 10 years before his death. Below, A preliminar­y dust jacket drawing is part of the UConn archive on Maurice Sendak.
 ?? Contribute­d photo / Contempora­ry Jewish Museum ?? A final drawing for “Where the Wild Things Are,” a 1963 pen-and-ink and watercolor by Maurice Sendak.
Contribute­d photo / Contempora­ry Jewish Museum A final drawing for “Where the Wild Things Are,” a 1963 pen-and-ink and watercolor by Maurice Sendak.
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Contribute­d photo

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