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The land of Oz is just how they imagined it

Exhibit highlights artists' different takes on Baum's tale
By Adam Gorlick, Associated Press August 6, 2006
AMHERST-- She started off looking like a clownish crazy woman -- her long hair in a wild braid and one eye wide open.

That was in 1900, when the Wicked Witch of the West made her debut in ``The Wonderful Wizard of Oz." But since W.W. Denslow first drew her for the pages of L. Frank Baum's classic children's book, Dorothy's nemesis has changed faces several times.
In 1981, Andy Warhol silk-screened her as Margaret Hamilton, freezing the actress in the green-faced role she played in Hollywood's 1939 production of the story. Four years later, artist Barry Moser turned her into Nancy Reagan , placing the pointy-hatted first lady against a dismal backdrop.
The original drawings and reinterpretations of the Wicked Witch and other characters are on display at the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art in ``The Wonderful Art of Oz," an exhibit that marks the 150th anniversary of the births of Baum and Denslow and pays tribute to the story's staying power.
The exhibit traces the story of Baum's book, from the cyclone that whisks Dorothy's Kansas farmhouse to Oz to the young girl's return home thanks to her magical slippers. Along the yellow brick road, she and her companions -- the Tin Woodsman, Lion, and Scarecrow -- must confront the wicked witch and find their way to the Emerald City, where the omniscient wizard is revealed as a man with no real power.
As the show retells the story, it highlights the different ways artists have interpreted it.
The clean lines of Denslow's Art Nouveau-inspired drawings give way to more elaborate images in later reworkings of the book.
There's Charles Santore's 1991 depiction of Munchkinland, where blond-haired Dorothy is greeted by gnomelike characters who look like leprechauns.
And when Dorothy and her gang burst into the Emerald City in Santore's version, they find a world where the buildings are based on the works of Antonio Gaudi , a Catalan architect known for his highly stylized designs.
Santore ``wanted to recognize the most visionary architect who was working at the time Baum was writing," said Nick Clark, the museum's founding director. ``It shows how these really good artists have a deep sense of history that they're trying to infuse in their own work."
And sometimes those artists just want to jazz things up.
The Tin Woodsman, for example, morphs from Denslow's monochrome compilation of metal parts to the multicolored beer cans and garbage scraps that became the character's costume for ``The Wiz," a 1975 musical.
And Dorothy -- an almost stocky and stubborn little girl in the 1900 original -- softens in the images inspired nearly 30 years later by Judy Garland's portrayal of the character in MGM's 1939 classic ``The Wizard of Oz."
While the movie helped bring new attention to what was already regarded as the most popular children's book of the time, some purists have a few bones to pick with that version . For one thing, it softened Baum's feminist message that girls can figure things out for themselves without falling apart when things get tough.
``Baum's Dorothy was more aggressive and independent," said Michael Patrick Hearn , the guest curator of the exhibit and author of ``The Annotated Wizard of Oz," who is writing a biography on Baum. ``She doesn't cry all the time like Judy Garland's Dorothy."
The feminist tone was inspired by Baum's mother-in-law, Matilda Joslyn Gage , the women's rights activist who died just a few years before his book was published.
``All the power in the story is with women," Hearn said. ``The good witch and bad witch had the power, and both were women. The wizard is ineffectual, and Dorothy's three male friends have faults and weaknesses."
Despite those faults -- and maybe in part because of them -- the story has maintained its place as one of the most recognizable children's stories.
``It has that kind of moral value system where good does triumph over evil," Clark said. ``That still seems to resonate with people."
© Copyright 2006 Globe Newspaper Company.


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