Anna Coleman Ladd
File:Anna Coleman Ladd (1878-1939).jpgAnna Coleman Watts Ladd (July 15, 1878 – June 3, 1939) was an American sculptor who traveled around the world in order to hone her skills. She is most well-known for her contributions to war efforts during World War I, but she was an accomplished sculptor, author, and playwright before the war began. She called many places home throughout her lifetime, including Pennsylvania, Boston, Rome, Paris, and California.
Biography
Anna Coleman Watts was born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, on July 15th, 1878, to John and Mary Watts.{{Cite web |title=Studio for Portrait Masks, 1918 – 1920 {{!}} Reid Hall |url=https://reidhall.globalcenters.columbia.edu/content/studio-portrait-masks-1918-1920#:~:text=Ladd%20employed%20her%20talents%20as,the%20carnage%20of%20the%20war. |access-date=2025-04-22 |website=reidhall.globalcenters.columbia.edu}} It is believed that she did not seek out formal training for the arts. Instead, she moved to Europe for 25 years, working in various studios{{such as|date=June 2025}}. On June 26th, 1905, she married Maynard Ladd, a physician, in Salisbury, England, and then moved to Boston. Together, they had two daughters, Gabriella May Ladd and Vernon Abbott Ladd.
While in Boston, Ladd's husband was a faculty member at Harvard Medical School, specializing in pediatric diseases. Meanwhile, Ladd focused on expanding her sculpting career while remaining the primary caretaker for both children.
In late 1917, her husband was appointed to direct the Children's Bureau of the American Red Cross in Toulouse. Ladd reluctantly stayed behind until she realized that her talents could be put to good use on the war front. She received permission and worked with the Red Cross to go to France to work in Paris's Masks for Facial Disfigurement Department.{{Cite web|url=https://www.smithsonianmag.com/arts-culture/faces-of-war-145799854/|title=Faces of War|website=Smithsonian Magazine}} There is no evidence that their two daughters were allowed to travel to Paris with them, likely staying behind in Boston.
In 1936, Ladd retired with her husband to Santa Barbara, California. On June 2nd, 1939, Ladd died from an undisclosed illness at sixty years old. She was survived by her daughters, Gabriella May Ladd, the second wife of Henry Dwight Sedgwick (Kyra Sedgwick's paternal great-grandfather), and Vernon Abbott Ladd.
Art Outside of Wartime
There is no recollection of Ladd attending formal training for sculpture. However, while studying sculpture, she received feedback from recognizable sculpting artists, such as Ettore Ferrari (Rome), Emilio Gallori (Rome), Auguste Rodin (Paris), and Charles Grafly (Philadelphia). She studied with Bela Pratt at the Boston Museum School upon her return to the United States.
Ladd wrote two books, The Joyous History of Hieronymus the Anonymous (1905), based on a medieval romance she worked on for years and The Candid Adventurer (1913), a sendup{{definition needed|date=June 2025}} of Boston society. The Candid Adventurer tells the story of a painter who cannot see past superficial beauty.{{Cite web |date=2019-07-26 |title=Reconstructing History: Anna Coleman Ladd, the Mask Artist of World War I |url=https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/583812/anna-coleman-ladd-mask-artist-world-war-i |access-date=2025-04-24 |website=Mental Floss |language=en-us}} The other protagonist feels as if she does not and cannot understand the struggles of those less fortunate than her. Unintentionally, this foreshadows Ladd's wartime experience. She also wrote two unproduced plays, one incorporating the story of a female sculptor who goes to war.
She devoted herself to portraiture{{when|date=June 2025}}, and her work was well-regarded{{by whom|date=June 2025}}.{{cn|date=June 2025}} Her portrait of Eleanora Duse was one of only three the actress allowed.{{cn|date=June 2025}}
After World War I, she depicted a decayed corpse on a barbed wire fence for a war memorial commissioned by the Manchester-by-the-Sea American Legion.
WWI and the Birth of Anaplastology
Anaplastology is defined as the combination of art and science, using design and engineering concepts to create removable prostheses, typically for the face and head.{{Cite web |title=Anaplastology/Facial & Ocular Prosthetics |url=https://hospital.uillinois.edu/primary-and-specialty-care/surgical-services/cleft-craniofacial-center/services-offered/anaplastology-facial-and-ocular-prosthetics |access-date=2025-04-25 |website=hospital.uillinois.edu |language=en}} World War I saw a dramatic expansion of the field, likely due to modern warfare weapons and techniques never used before.
Prosthetics work
Ladd stayed on the home front when her husband was sent to Paris; in her search for ways to help the war effort, she learned about the work of Francis Derwent Wood in London through C. Lewis Hind. Wood developed lifelike masks to help soldiers with facial deformities. Through correspondence with Wood, Ladd decided on a new process for creating masks using gutta-percha. She applied for permission to go to France to work with the soldiers there but had to receive special permission from General John J. Pershing to do so, as it was forbidden for husbands and wives to serve in war zones at the same time.
Ladd founded the American Red Cross "Studio for Portrait-Masks" to provide cosmetic masks to be worn by men who had been badly disfigured in World War I. These men became collectively known as Gueules cassées. As the importance of her work was recognized, she was able to obtain permission to create these cosmetic masks for disfigured soldiers living throughout France, rather than only Paris.File:Anna Coleman Ladd and soldier.jpg
Soldiers came to Ladd's studio to have a cast made of their face and their features sculpted onto clay or plasticine. Ladd would reference pre-injury photos of the soldiers to make masks as realistic as possible. This form was then used to construct the prosthetic piece from extremely thin galvanized copper. The metal was painted with hard enamel to resemble the recipient's skin tone. Ladd used real hair to create the eyelashes, eyebrows, and mustaches. The prosthesis was attached to the face by strings or eyeglasses as the prosthetics created in Wood's "Tin Noses Shop" were.{{cite web|title=Women in World War I - Anna Coleman Ladd|url=http://americanhistory.si.edu/collections/object-groups/women-in-wwi/anna-coleman-ladd|website=National Museum of American History|publisher=Smithsonian|accessdate=1 March 2018}} When sculpting the masks, the lips were created to be slightly opened, to allow the victim to speak or smoke with relative ease.
The masks were important because they provided soldiers with an opportunity to reintegrate into society without causing other civilians to stop and stare at them.{{Cite web |title=Anna Coleman Ladd: Art Helping Veterans |url=https://www.gardnermuseum.org/blog/anna-coleman-ladd-art-helping-veterans |access-date=2025-04-22 |website=www.gardnermuseum.org |language=en}} Ladd’s work is now called anaplastology. Anaplastology is the art, craft, and science of restoring absent or malformed anatomy artificially. Anaplastology, along with modern plastic surgery, was greatly shaped by World War I. It was during World War I that modern weapons and lack of protection for faces and skulls created a drastic increase in soldiers affected by facial disfigurement.{{Cite web |title=The birth of plastic surgery {{!}} National Army Museum |url=https://www.nam.ac.uk/explore/birth-plastic-surgery |access-date=2025-04-22 |website=www.nam.ac.uk |language=en}}
Awards and Accomplishments
File:Triton Babies in Boston Public Garden.JPGFrom 1907 to 1915, Ladd was the sole sculptor featured in multiple exhibitions, including exhibitions at The Gorham Gallery in New York (1913), the Corcoran Gallery in Washington D.C., and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Outside of these solo exhibitions, her works were featured at the Salon des Beaux-Arts (1913), the Art Institute of Chicago, the Boston Museum of Fine Arts, the National Academy of Design, and the National Sculpture Society.
Her Triton Babies piece was shown at the 1915 Panama-Pacific Exposition in San Francisco. (It is now a fountain sculpture in the Boston Public Garden.) In 1914, she was founding member of the Guild of Boston Artists and exhibited in both the opening show and the traveling exhibition that followed. She later held a one-woman show at the Guild's gallery. She completed other works with mythological characters, and these pieces continue to surface and are sold in auctions today.{{cite web |title=Anna Coleman Ladd |url=http://www.ragoarts.com/results/?p=search&q=anna+coleman+ladd |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110715151656/http://www.ragoarts.com/results/?p=search&q=anna+coleman+ladd |archive-date=2011-07-15 |access-date=2009-07-26 |work=Fine Art May 2007 |publisher=Rago Arts and Auction Center}} Her services earned her the Légion d'Honneur Croix de Chevalier and the Serbian Order of Saint Sava.{{Cite web |title=A Finding Aid to the Anna Coleman Ladd papers, 1881-1950 | Digitized Collection |url=https://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/anna-coleman-ladd-papers-10600 |website=www.aaa.si.edu}} Her sculpture Triton Babies is featured on the Boston Women's Heritage Trail.{{cite web |title=Back Bay East |url=http://bwht.org/back-bay-east/ |website=Boston Women's Heritage Trail}}
References
{{Reflist}}
; Sources
- Anna Coleman Ladd papers, 1881–1950. Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
- [https://web.archive.org/web/20080828002300/http://www.bwht.org/winter2003_2.html Anna Coleman Ladd (1878–1939), by Karen Tenney-Loring]
- Alexander, Caroline (2007). "Faces of War". Smithsonian, February 2007, pp. 72–80.
External links
- [http://www.aaa.si.edu/collections/findingaids/laddanna.htm Anna Coleman Ladd Papers at the Smithsonian's Archives of American Art]
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Category:American women in World War I
Category:People from Manchester-by-the-Sea, Massachusetts
Category:Knights of the Legion of Honour
Category:Recipients of the Order of St. Sava
Category:Sculptors from Massachusetts
Category:20th-century American sculptors
Category:20th-century American women sculptors
Category:People from Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania