Skip to main content
After M Whurther Run Glandelinians attack and blow up train carrying children to refuge. (doubl…
After M Whurther Run Glandelinians attack and blow up train carrying children to refuge. (double-sided)
After M Whurther Run Glandelinians attack and blow up train carrying children to refuge. (doubl…
After M Whurther Run Glandelinians attack and blow up train carrying children to refuge. (double-sided) Henry Darger Photo by Gavin Ashworth
© Kiyoko Lerner
Record Details

After M Whurther Run Glandelinians attack and blow up train carrying children to refuge. (double-sided)

Artist ((1892–1973))
Date1970
Place/RegionChicago, Illinois, United States
MediumWatercolor, pencil, carbon tracing, and collage on pieced paper
Dimensions23 × 36 3/4"
Credit LineGift of Sam and Betsey Farber © Kiyoko Lerner
Accession number2003.8.1B
Description

Henry Darger’s artistic achievement is largely literary in conception. The masterful 15,000-page epic, The Story of the Vivian Girls, in What Is Known as the Realms of the Unreal, of the Glandeco-Angelinnian War Storm, Caused by the Child Slave Rebellion, was started when Darger was nineteen years old and finished many years later. Darger created an astonishing body of artwork to illustrate this manuscript: it is these fantastic single-sheet and panoramic multi-sheet watercolors, executed in lyrical hues, for which he is best known. These were originally bound into three volumes, and, as illustrations to a narrative, the imagery reflects themes of conflict, abuse of power, magic, redemption, and triumph that are contained in the story. In addition to In the Realms of the Unreal, Darger’s texts include its sequel, Further Adventures in Chicago: Crazy House; a six-volume weather journal; and an autobiography, all now in the museum’s holdings. The full breadth of Darger’s work was only discovered after his death by his Chicago landlord, artist and industrial designer Nathan Lerner.

Stacy C. Hollander, "After M Whurther Run Glandelinians attack and blow up train carrying children to refuge," exhibition label for Jubilation|Rumination: Life, Real and Imagined. Stacy C. Hollander, curator. New York: American Folk Art Museum, 2012.

Object information is a work in progress and may be updated with new research. Records are reviewed and revised, and the American Folk Art Museum welcomes additional information. 

To help improve this record, please email photoservices@folkartmuseum.org