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<ead><eadheader langencoding="iso639-2b" scriptencoding="iso15924" relatedencoding="dc" repositoryencoding="iso15511" countryencoding="iso3166-1" dateencoding="iso8601" id="a0"><eadid countrycode="us" mainagencycode="wauar" encodinganalog="identifier" url="http://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:/80444/xv86773" identifier="80444/xv86773">WAUMrOtisPHColl425.xml</eadid><filedesc><titlestmt><titleproper>Guide to the Stewart H. Holbrook Mr. Otis Paintings Collection <date encodinganalog="date" era="ce">1947-1962</date></titleproper><titleproper type="filing" altrender="nodisplay">Holbrook (Stewart H.)
			 Mr. Otis Paintings Collection</titleproper></titlestmt><publicationstmt><publisher encodinganalog="publisher">Special Collections, University of Washington Libraries</publisher><date normal="2008" encodinganalog="date">© 2008 (Last modified: 11/27/2017)</date><address><addressline>Seattle, WA 98195</addressline></address></publicationstmt></filedesc><profiledesc><langusage>Finding aid written in 
		  <language langcode="eng" encodinganalog="language" scriptcode="latn">English</language>.</langusage><descrules>Finding aid based on DACS (<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Describing Archives: A Content Standard</title>).</descrules></profiledesc></eadheader><archdesc level="collection" type="inventory" relatedencoding="marc21"><did><repository><corpname>University of Washington Libraries, Special Collections</corpname></repository><unitid countrycode="us" repositorycode="wauar">PH0425</unitid><origination><persname encodinganalog="100" role="collector" rules="aacr2" source="lcnaf" authfilenumber="301231">Holbrook, Stewart H., 1893-1964</persname></origination><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="collection">Stewart H. Holbrook
		  Mr. Otis paintings collection </unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" encodinganalog="245$f" normal="1947/1962" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947-1962</unitdate><physdesc><extent>27 paintings, 2 reproduction
		  prints (5 boxes) : oil on canvas</extent></physdesc><langmaterial>Collection materials are in 
		<language langcode="eng" scriptcode="latn" encodinganalog="546">English</language>.</langmaterial><abstract encodinganalog="5203_$a">Oil paintings by
		  Mr. Otis, a Northwest artist active from the 1930s to the early
		  1960s</abstract></did><bioghist encodinganalog="5450_" id="ARN301231" altrender="sync"><p>Stewart Hall Holbrook emerged from logging camps to become, in the
		  words of Lewis Gannett, “the only ex-lumberjack who has lectured at
		  Harvard University on American history.” Holbrook, the
		  “Lumberjack Boswell,” was born in Vermont on August 12, 1893. His
		  father bounced around North America, taking the young Stewart with him, until
		  dying suddenly in Manitoba. Now a teenager, Stewart found himself deposited
		  alone on the Canadian plains. He survived with various jobs, including
		  reporting for a Winnipeg newspaper and performing in a traveling dramatic stock
		  company, before serving in France as an artillery sergeant during the First
		  World War. After the war, he bought a round-trip ticket to British Columbia,
		  curious to see the big trees he had heard about. He took employment in a
		  logging camp, and was so enamored with the work and the region that he cashed
		  in his return ticket. He spent the next three years as a clerk in isolated
		  logging camps, while writing articles and drawing popular cartoons for the 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">British Columbia Lumberman</title> at night. His
		desire to pursue his writing career propelled him to Portland in 1923, lured by
		“the finest public library in the West.”</p><p>He spent the rest of the decade dividing his time between writing
		  stories and freelance articles and the editing work that provided a semblance
		  of a steady income. This precarious career crashed with the Great Depression.
		  “The mss market,” he lamented, “is as bad off as the
		  so-called stock market.” Despite the lean years, he persevered, and was
		  enjoying renewed success by the mid-1930s. He completed his first book during
		  this time, but at least the first three publishers he solicited thought the
		  manuscript warranted only a rejection slip. Finally, the Macmillian Company
		  decided to publish it in 1938. 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Holy Old Mackinaw: A Natural History of the American Lumberjack</title> spent five months on national best-seller lists.
		Fortified by the prospect of additional successes, he moved to Boston and began
		cranking out a steady and swift stream of additional books on a wide variety of
		historical subjects, establishing himself as one of the country’s most
		popular historians. He returned to the Pacific Northwest in the early 1940s to
		head the newly-created Keep Washington Green organization. The nonprofit
		corporation, grounded in the private forest industry and actively endorsed by
		the U.S. Forest Service and state government, popularized the problem of forest
		fire much as Smokey Bear would begin to do a few years later. Out of his work
		for the Keep Washington Green movement, Holbrook wrote 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Burning an Empire</title>, the first, and for
		decades the only, history of wildlands fire.</p><p>Holbrook purposely set himself apart from academic history and the
		  “timidity and woodenness usual to professors.” He disliked the
		  use of footnotes and presented his work as an alternative to what he saw as the
		  arid and colorless output of “stuffed-shirt historians.” He also
		  wanted to resurrect important individuals neglected by academic history, a goal
		  most explicitly followed in his 1946 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Lost Men of American History</title>. If his
		deliberate attempt to write “low-brow” history sprang from his
		inclinations, it also had a very practical dimension. Unlike most academic
		historians, Holbrook enjoyed neither a college paycheck nor fellowships; his
		income depended upon writing books that would sell in sufficient quantities.
		Yet, despite his zeal to write popular history, he never abandoned the desire
		to infuse his work with high literary quality. He never did resolve the tension
		between the often competing demands of the market and the muse.</p><p>He moved back to Portland in the mid-1940s, this time permanently, and
		  continued his prolific production. He also undertook a second career, as the
		  popular oil painter “Mr. Otis.” Through Mr. Otis, Holbrook poked
		  fun at the pretensions of modern art, while individual pieces such as
		  “Someone has been here before us Meriwether” and “I was
		  with Custer said the old man” allowed him to deflate myths surrounding
		  the Little Big Horn and the “overly sentimental cult of the
		  pioneer.” In keeping with his mischievous personality, he never publicly
		  admitted being Mr. Otis, whom he heralded as the founder of the
		  “Primitive-Moderne School” of art. (The final "e" in moderne was
		  indispensable, according to Holbrook. “It makes the word foreign hence
		  fashionable.”) </p><p>In the early 1960s, Holbrook suffered a series of incapacitating
		  strokes which essentially curtailed his literary and artistic production. He
		  died from complications of a heart attack in September 1964.</p><p>Holbrook published some of his crime stories under pseudonyms. These
		  include: Marcus M. Clark, Chris K. Stanton, Stanley Underwood, Ethan O. Allen
		  and Lee Howard. He also used the pseudonyms, Stewart Hall or Dutch in theater
		  work.</p></bioghist><odd encodinganalog="5450_" id="a2" type="hist"><p> In 1949, a bright artistic talent in the form of the mysterious Mr.
		  Otis appeared on the Portland, Oregon art scene. Northwest author Stewart H.
		  Holbrook, Mr. Otis' "discoverer," had become acquainted with the artist (a man
		  of "shabby gentility" who "wore neither a beret nor a beard") when they shared
		  quarters at the Press Club's Portland mansion in the 1930s. Rejected for
		  employment by the WPA, Mr. Otis spent the lean years of the Depression
		  bartering paintings for food. The artist and the author continued their
		  acquaintance throughout the 1930s and 1940s, and Holbrook offered Mr. Otis
		  studio space in his own workshop. </p><p>In 1949, Mr. Otis was thrilled to see one of his paintings, 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Fido Can Set Up!</title>, in the Portland 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Oregonian</title>. He had submitted it to the
		paper's Salon Arts Independent. As Holbrook put it, "the dam had broken, the
		Otis cup ranneth over." Before long, Mr. Otis' works were displayed in the
		homes and offices of prominent personalities such as Bennett Cerf and Bernard
		De Voto. Although the Portland Art Museum refused Mr. Otis a one-man show,
		exhibits of his work sprang up all over town, and eventually, all over the
		country, much to the delight of eager art aficionados and collectors.</p><p>Stewart Holbrook provided further details of his friendship with the
		  artist in the 1958 book, 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title>, which displayed several of Mr.
		Otis' works and included an introduction by Holbrook. The introduction hailed
		Mr. Otis as the founding member of the Primitive-Moderne school of painting
		(Holbrook insisted that the "e" at the end of "Moderne" was "imperative," as
		"it makes the word foreign, hence fashionable"). Holbrook frequently made
		appearances on behalf of the somewhat reserved Mr. Otis, who was often busy
		with work. </p><p>Most of Mr. Otis' works were oil paintings, but he also employed
		  techniques of collage and mixed media. Historical figures such as Jesse James,
		  James G. Blaine, and Lydia Pinkham appear in Mr. Otis' paintings, while other
		  scenes reference historical, literary, or even Biblical subjects. Genre scenes
		  -- often whimsical, humorous, or even satirical -- also appear. While Mr. Otis'
		  style often defied classification, the artist once stated that "I always paint
		  as <emph render="italic"> I </emph> see things."</p><p> Forty of Mr. Otis' works were displayed in an exhibition entitled
		  "The World of Mr. Otis" at the University of Oregon Museum of Art in 1994, and,
		  in 2005, the University of Washington's Special Collections Division exhibited
		  several of Mr. Otis' paintings in a show entitled "Pure Poppycock: The
		  Paintings of Mr. Otis." </p></odd><scopecontent encodinganalog="5202_" id="a3"><p>The collection contains twenty-six paintings by Mr. Otis, two
		  reproduction prints, and one painting by Karen Quinn. All but one of the
		  paintings are oil on canvas. While many paintings are untitled, others have
		  typed or penciled titles and notes on the verso. The inventory notes where
		  images have been illustrated in the 1958 book 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook. It also
		contains color transparencies of paintings not held in this collection.</p><p>Several of Mr. Otis' more well-known paintings, including 
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Fido Can Set Up #2</title>, appear in the
		collection. Some paintings are untitled, and several are unfinished.</p><p>All works are by Mr. Otis unless otherwise indicated; all paintings
		  are oil on canvas unless otherwise indicated.</p></scopecontent><odd encodinganalog="500" id="a5"><p>Beloved Northwest author Stewart H. Holbrook, a Vermont native and
		  former logger, came to Portland, Oregon, in 1923. His works of popular history
		  covered a variety of topics, including logging, famous figures of the Old West,
		  and interesting events and people of the Pacific Northwest. A columnist for the
		  
		<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Oregonian</title>, Holbrook had articles published
		in newspapers and magazines all over the country, and he published many books.
		Holbrook described these writings as "lowbrow or non-stuffed shirt history."
		The much-celebrated author was known to consort with a wide variety of people,
		from the literary elite to loggers and labor organizers. </p><p>Given Holbrook's reputation as a colorful character in the literary
		  and social worlds, it was only a matter of time before he turned the art world
		  upside down. Although the author never admitted it publicly, it was Holbrook,
		  encouraged by his wife Sibyl, who had taken up his brush in the 1940s, signing
		  the resulting works with the name Mr. Otis. True to form, Holbrook used Mr.
		  Otis' brightly-colored paintings to poke fun at society, history, and modern
		  art. </p><p>Stewart Holbrook died in 1964. </p></odd><arrangement encodinganalog="351" id="a4"><p>Paintings in the collection are arranged alphabetically by title.</p></arrangement><accessrestrict encodinganalog="506" id="a14"><p>Entire collection can be viewed on the Libraries’ Digital Collections website.  Permission of Visual Materials Curator required to view originals.  Contact Special Collections for more information.</p><p><extref href="https://uw.aeon.atlas-sys.com/logon/?Action=10&amp;Form=31&amp;Value=https://archiveswest.orbiscascade.org/ark:80444/xv86773/xml" role="text/html" actuate="onrequest" show="new" id="aeon">Request at UW</extref></p></accessrestrict><userestrict encodinganalog="540" id="a15"><p>Restrictions may exist on reproduction, quotation, or publication.
		  Contact the repository for details.</p></userestrict><acqinfo encodinganalog="541" id="a19"><p>Source: Sibyl Holbrook Strahl. [Transparencies not from Sibyl Holbrook
		  Strahl. Probably made for an exhibit at one time.]</p></acqinfo><processinfo encodinganalog="583" id="a20" audience="external"><p>Processed by Shannon B. Lynch, 2005, and Megan E. Peacock, 2006;
		  Revised by Stefanie Terasaki, 2013.</p></processinfo><bibliography id="a11"><p><bibref linktype="simple"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title>, by Stewart H. Holbrook,
			 1958.</bibref></p><p><bibref linktype="simple"><title linktype="simple">"Mr. Otis and Mr. Holbrook,"</title>by Brian Booth. Included
			 in the exhibition catalogue for 
			 <title render="italic" linktype="simple">The World of Mr. Otis</title> at the
			 University of Oregon Museum of Art in 1994. </bibref></p><p><bibref linktype="simple"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Wildmen, Wobblies and Whistle Punks: Stewart Holbrook's Lowbrow Northwest</title>, edited and introduced by Brian Booth,
			 1993. </bibref></p></bibliography><controlaccess id="a12"><persname role="subject" encodinganalog="600" source="lcnaf" rules="aacr2" authfilenumber="301231 ">Holbrook, Stewart H., 1893-1964--Pictorial works</persname><subject source="lcsh" encodinganalog="650" rules="scm">Parody in art--Specimens</subject><subject source="lcsh" rules="scm" encodinganalog="650">American wit and humor, Pictorial--Specimens</subject><subject source="lcsh" rules="scm" encodinganalog="650">Artists--Oregon</subject><subject source="lcsh" rules="scm" encodinganalog="650">Painting, American--20th century</subject><subject source="lcsh" rules="scm" encodinganalog="650">Painting, Modern--20th century--Humor</subject><subject source="uwsc">Visual Materials Collections (University of Washington)</subject><subject source="archiveswest" encodinganalog="690" altrender="nodisplay">Arts and Humanities</subject><genreform source="gmgpc" encodinganalog="655">Oil paintings</genreform></controlaccess><dsc type="combined" id="a23"><p> </p><p>The following section contains a detailed listing of the materials in
		  the collection.</p><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>Mr. Otis Paintings</unittitle></did><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/1</container><container type="item">1</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">The Demon Rum</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.1/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/1</container><container type="item">2</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">"Fido Can Set Up!" #2</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.2/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">2a</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Fido Can Set Up</emph> color
				  transparency</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate></did><note><p>Color transparency number: UW29166</p><p>Color transparency missing as of 2013.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">5/1</container><container type="item">3</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">The Fall Term Opens</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.3/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">4/1</container><container type="item">4</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Frank Merriwell and the Harvard Cads</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.4/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Caption on verso: "Yale's incomparable hero; ask Dad, he
				  knows"</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/2</container><container type="item">5</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">House in the Swamp</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.5/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">4/2</container><container type="item">6</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">I Was With Custer the Old Man Said</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate></did><note><p>Reproduction print from collection of Tom Booth.</p><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">6a</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">I Was with Custer the Old Man
				  Said</emph> color transparency</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate></did><note><p>Color transparency number: UW29167</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/3</container><container type="item">7</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">James G. Blaine is Nominated</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1948</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.7/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Signed: Calvin Otis.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">5/2</container><container type="item">8</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">James G. Blaine #2</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.8/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/4</container><container type="item">9</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Jesse James Was Always Kind to His Horse</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1960</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.9/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Caption on verso: "An interesting moment in the great man's
				  parlor"</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/5</container><container type="item">10</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">The Juvenile Delinquents of 1896</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.10/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">4/3</container><container type="item">11</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">The Ladder of Success and the Buzzard</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.11/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.
				Title in book is 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">The Ladder of Success; or, Horatio Alger, Jr., &amp; the Buzzard</title>.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">11a</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">The Ladder of Sucess </emph>or 
				  <emph render="italic">Horatio Alger, Jr., &amp; The Buzzard</emph> color
				  transparency</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW29162</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">4/4</container><container type="item">12</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">The New Rigging Crew at Dosewallips, Washington</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1961</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.12/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">2/2</container><container type="item">13</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Nostalgia of an Aged Roué</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.13/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Reproduction print.</p><p>Includes publicity review and information about recent gallery
				  showing.</p><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">13a</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Nostalgia of an Aged Roué</emph>
				  color transparency</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Color transparency number: UW29163</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/6</container><container type="item">14</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">A Portrait of Joaquin Miller</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.14/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.
				Title in book is 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Call Me Ishmael He Cried</title>.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">14a</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Call me Ishmael he cried </emph><emph render="italic">[A Portrait of Joaquin Miller] </emph> color
				  transparency</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate></did><note><p>Color transparency number: UW29164</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/7</container><container type="item">15</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Skid Road Queen #1</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1947</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.15/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Signed: Hols.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">4/5</container><container type="item">16</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">"There Goes Steve Brodie Now!"</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1959</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.16/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Caption on verso: "Only sophisticates will appreciate this scene
				  at Brooklyn Bridge"</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">4/6</container><container type="item">17</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">"Where is Shorty This Morning?"</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.17/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">17a</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Where is Shorty this
				  Morning</emph> color transparency</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW29165</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">4/7</container><container type="item">18</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">A Wild-Eyed Patriarch Posed Before a Timeline of Biblical and Historical Events</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.18/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Title taken from Mr. Otis exhibit at 
				   <extref show="new" actuate="onrequest" href="http://www.intangible.org">www.intangible.org</extref> </p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">4/8</container><container type="item">19</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Circus strongman watched by woman in green dress</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.19/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Title taken from item list in catalogue for University of Oregon
				  exhibit.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/8</container><container type="item">20</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Girl with broom; bogeyman in window</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate><physdesc><extent> : Oil on masonite</extent></physdesc><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.20/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Title taken from item list in catalogue for University of Oregon
				  exhibit.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/1</container><container type="item">21</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto"><title render="italic" linktype="simple">Speaker at I.W.W. rally</title></unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.21/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>Title taken from item list in catalogue for University of Oregon
				  exhibit.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/9</container><container type="item">22</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto">Untitled (man on
				  sled with oxen)</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.22/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/10</container><container type="item">23</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto">Untitled (snow
				  scene in town)</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.23/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">3/11</container><container type="item">24</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto">Untitled
				  (Skidmore Fountain, Portland, Oregon, with peacock; unfinished)</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.24/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/3</container><container type="item">25</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto">Untitled (swirls
				  of paint with an eye)</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.25/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/4</container><container type="item">26</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto">Untitled (fire
				  engine and firemen; "Mary Ann Mill City")</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.26/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">1/2</container><container type="item">27</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto">Untitled (people
				  in snow)</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.27/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="file"><did><container type="box-folder">3/12</container><container type="item">28</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto">Untitled (swirls
				  of paint)</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.28/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="box-folder">2/5</container><container type="item">29</container><unittitle encodinganalog="245$a" type="itemphoto">Untitled
				  (Japanese woman)</unittitle><unitdate type="inclusive" era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1962</unitdate><origination><persname role="artist">Quinn, Karen</persname></origination><daogrp><resource label="start"> </resource><daoloc label="icon" role="text/html" href="http://digitalcollections.lib.washington.edu/cdm/search/searchterm/425.29/field/descri/mode/any/conn/and/order/title"/><arc from="start" to="icon" show="new" actuate="onrequest"/></daogrp></did><note><p>An envelope containing notes written between Karen Quinn and
				  Stewart H. Holbrook is taped to the verso of the painting. </p></note></c02></c01><c01 level="series"><did><unittitle>Color Transparencies of Mr. Otis Paintings not owned by
				the University of Washington</unittitle></did><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-1</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">The Dilema of Piet
				  Mondrian</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1958</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Painting in the collection of Brian and Gwyneth Booth.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW34493</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-2</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">A Gathering of Pioneers at the
				  Skidmore Fountain</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW34494</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-3</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Great Ideas of Western
				  Man</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW34495</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-4</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">It Talks Good
				  Daddy</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1955</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW34496</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-5</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">John the
				  Messenger</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1953</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW34497</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-6</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">The Jolly Capitalist
				  Retired</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1952</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW34498</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-7</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">A Legend of Fall River
				  (Massachusetts)</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW34499</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-8</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Listen my Children said Mr.
				  Longfellow</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate><note><note><p>Illustrated in 
					 <title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H.
					 Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35500</p></note></note></did></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-9</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Low Tide at
				  Megler</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35501</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-10</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Lydia E. Pinkham Enters Heaven No.
				  1</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>In the collection of Brian and Gwyneth Booth.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35502, UW35503</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-11</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">The Man is Here about the
				  Wallpaper</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1949</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35504</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-12</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Mr. Audubon finds the Lesser
				  Bustard (Nesting)</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35505</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-13</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">The New
				  Galluses</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35506</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-14</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Night Life in
				  Portland</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1950</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35507</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-15</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Ode to the Great Speckled
				  Bird</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>In the collection of Don and Roberta Jean Fox.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35508</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-16</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">The Pioneer Mother with Child and
				  Late Husband</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35509</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-17</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Return of the Farmer's
				  Daughter</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1956</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35510</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-18</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">The Rise of
				  Populism</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">circa 1955</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35511</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-19</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">A Room with a
				  View</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35512</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-20</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Self-portrait of the
				  artist</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35513</p><p>From catalogue for University of Oregon exhibit: Adding collage
				  to his usual medium, Mr. Otis struck a surprisingly carefree note for this snug
				  scene in his atelier.</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-21</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Truth Crushed to Earth at Third
				  and Burnside</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">undated</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35514</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-22</container><unittitle><emph render="italic">Welcome to the New
				  Poltergeist</emph></unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Illustrated in 
				<title render="italic" linktype="simple">Mr. Otis</title> by Stewart H. Holbrook.</p><p>Color transparency number: UW35515</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-23</container><unittitle>Unidentified (Abstract figures in a group)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1954</unitdate></did><note><p>Color transparency number: UW35516</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-24</container><unittitle>Unidentified (Group of figures with a signs)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1957</unitdate></did><note><p>Color transparency number: UW35517</p></note></c02><c02 level="item"><did><container type="case">ND</container><container type="item">C-25</container><unittitle>Unidentified (Man with a cane)</unittitle><unitdate era="ce" calendar="gregorian">1951</unitdate></did><note><p>Color transparency number: UW35518</p></note></c02></c01></dsc></archdesc></ead>

