Ronni Solbert

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Ronni Solbert
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Born
Romaine G. Solbert

(1925-09-07) September 7, 1925 (age 98)
Washington, D.C.
NationalityAmerican
CitizenshipUnited States of America
Occupation
  • Illustrator
  • Artist
  • Photographer
  • Author
Years active1951-date
Notable work
The Pushcart War, Bronzeville Boys and Girls

Ronni Solbert is an artist, photographer, and author, known primarily as an illustrator of books, including The Pushcart War and more than a dozen other titles written by her partner Jean Merrill.

Biography

Solbert was born in Washington, D.C. and grew up in Rochester, New York Her father was Oscar Solbert|Oscar Nathaniel Solbert, a Swedish immigrant who became a general in the United States Army, serving in both World War I and World War II and working as an executive at the Kodak|Eastman Kodak Company before becoming the first director of the George Eastman House|George Eastman House International Museum of Photography and Film. During his early military career, Oscar Solbert met and married Elizabeth Abernaty. Their daughter was given the name “Romaine,” after an aunt, but that name was shortened to “Ronni.”[1]

Solbert attended Vassar College, graduating with honors in 1946, and continued her studies at Cranbrook Academy of Art in Michigan, were she earned an M.F.A. in 1948.[1][2]

After graduating from Cranbrook, Solbert worked in Stockholm, Sweden, where she did translating and broadcasting work for the International Red Cross. Thereafter she taught children painting and sculpture at University of Rochester. She also studied and worked in Robert Blackburn (artist) Graphic Workshop in New York City. She worked in India with support of the Fulbright Program.[3] (Merrill was also a Fulbright scholar in India.[4]) Solbert returned to New York to pursue a career in art and illustration. In 1959, the Museum of Modern Art featured Solbert's paintings in one of the museum's "New Talent" exhibitions.[2]

In New York, Solbert met Merrill (who, coincidentally, had also grown up near Rochester). The two became friends and, eventually, partners. While in New York,the couple were active in the community. In 1970, they moved to Vermont.[1] Merrill died of cancer in 2012.[4]

Works

While predominantly known as an illustrator, Solbert has also worked as an author, editor, photographer, and created works of fine art. Her work includes:

As Illustrator

Jean Merrill, Henry, the Hand-Painted Mouse, Coward, 1951.

Jean Merrill, The Woover, Coward, 1952.

Jean Merrill, Boxes, Coward, 1953.

Jean Merrill, The Tree House of Jimmy Domino, Oxford University Press, 1955.

Jean Merrill, The Travels of Marco, Knopf, 1956.

Henry Chafetz, The Lost Dream, Knopf, 1956.

Elizabeth Johnson, The Little Knight, Little, Brown, 1957.

Jean Merrill, A Song for Gar, Whittlesey House, 1957.

Elizabeth Low, Mouse, Mouse, Go Out of My House, Little, Brown, 1958.

Henry Chafetz, The Legend of Befana, Houghton, 1958.

Audrey McKim, Andy and the Gopher, Little, Brown, 1959.

Aline Harvard, Run Away Home, Lothrop, 1959.

Jean Merrill and Eunice Holsaert, Outer Space, Henry Holt, 1959.

Kay Boyle, The Youngest Camel, Harper, 1959.

Jean Merrill, Blue's Broken Heart, Whittlesey House, 1960.

Jean Merrill, Shan's Lucky Knife, W. R. Scott, 1960.

Jean Merrill, Emily Emerson's Moon, Little, Brown, 1960.

Parvati Thampi, Geeta and the Village School, Doubleday, 1960.

Marion Garthwaite, Mario, Doubleday, 1960.

Elizabeth Johnson, The Three-in-One-Prince, Little, Brown, 1960.

Elizabeth Low, Snug in the Snow, Little, Brown, 1963.

Jean Merrill, The Superlative Horse, W. R. Scott, 1963.

Jean Merrill, High, Wide and Handsome, W. R. Scott, 1964.

Jean Merrill, The Pushcart War, W. R. Scott, 1964.

Violet Weingarten, The Nile, Lifeline of Egypt, Garrard, 1964.

Adele De Leeuw, Indonesian Legends and Folk Tales, Thomas Nelson, 1964.

Henry Chafetz, Thunderbird and Other Stories, Pantheon, 1965.

Mary Neville, Woody and Me, Pantheon, 1966.

Virginia Haviland, Favorite Fairy Tales Told in Sweden, Little, Brown, 1966.

Jean Merrill, The Elephant Who Liked to Smash Small Cars, Pantheon, 1967.

Jean Merrill, Red Riding, Pantheon, 1968.

Jean Merrill, The Black Sheep, Pantheon, 1969.

Kobayashi Issa, A Few Flies and I: Haiku by Issa, Pantheon, 1969 (also editor, with Merrill).

Jean Merrill, Mary, Come Running, McCall, 1970.

Giose Rimanelli and Paul Pinsleur, Pictures Make Poems, Pantheon, 1972.

Mary Ann Hoberman, Nuts to You and Nuts to Me, Knopf, 1974.

Salley Hovey Wriggins, White Monkey King, Pantheon, 1977.

As Author and Illustrator

32 Feet of Insides, Pantheon, 1970.

As Author and Photographer

I Wrote My Name on the Wall, Brown, 1971.

The Song that Sings Itself, Bobbs-Merrill, 1972.

As Photographer

Gwendolyn Brooks, Bronzeville Boys and Girls, Harper, 1957.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Smith, Nicola (11 October 2014). "A Story of Might and Right". Valley News. Retrieved 24 February 2021.
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Press Release, New Talent XII: Ronnie Solbert" (PDF). 24 September 1959. Retrieved 1 March 2021. (This press release and a catalogue of the exhibition is available from main page for exhibition at https://www.moma.org/calendar/exhibitions/3363.)
  3. "Ronni Solbert". New York Review Books. New York Review Books. Retrieved 1 March 2021.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Vitello, Paul (11 August 2012). "Jean Merrill, a Writer of Children's Underdog Tales, Dies at 89". The New York Times. Retrieved 1 March 2021.

External links

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