Born in Eureka,
California, James Swinnerton became a famous painter of
desert landscapes following a successful career as an illustrator
and cartoonist.
His mother died
when he was young, and his father, the son of a Forty-Niner at
Dutch Flat, started the newspaper, the Humboldt Star in Humboldt
County and then became a judge in Stockton. Swinnerton was
raised by an uncle in Santa Clara and first took art classes at the
California School of Art with Emil Carlsen. He ignored many
assignments and did caricatures of his teachers.
He went to work at
age 17 for the San Francisco Examiner where he became a favorite of
owner/ publisher William Randolph Hearst, who was impressed by the
caricatures. Swinnerton did cartoons of sporting events and
for weather forecasts drew comic bears, pantomimes of the weather,
which became so popular that they were the first syndicated comic
strips. When Hearst, went to New York to start a Sunday
supplement, he joined him and there launched the comic strips,
Little Jimmy and Little Tiger. With his Little Jimmy comic
strip, he holds the American record for the oldest comic strip in
existence created by the same artist.
A combination of
alcoholism, exhaustion, and tuberculosis forced him to quit, but
Hearst sent him to a sanatorium in Colton, California, where he was
expected to die. However, giving up drinking and recovering from
tuberculosis, he lived to the age of 99, moving in 1903 to the
desert of Palm Springs where he became a great favorite and lodger
of Mrs. Nellie Coffman who owned the Desert Inn.
From 1907,
traveling with burro, sketching pad, and sleeping in the open air,
he ranged over the entire Southwest, painting the Arizona desert,
Grand Canyon, and Navajo scenes as well as many California
landscapes. This subject matter and lifestyle set the pattern
for his career. He moved for a period to Flagstaff to be near
the Navajos, and Hearst visited him there. All this time, he
continued the Little Jimmy series and for Good Housekeeping
Magazine added Canyon Kiddies, Indian children doing all sorts of
antics, and this series became highly popular.
He married Gretchen
Parshall in 1938, ultimately settled in Cathedral City, California,
and kept studios in Los Angeles and Palm Springs. His oil
paintings, especially the ones of his later years, had a delicate
blending of soft colors and lighting. In 1969, retrospective
exhibitions of his work were held in Flagstaff and Palm
Springs.
The image that accompanies
this article is a self-portrait sketch drawn by Swinnerton in 1896.