Eleanor Campbell (illustrator)


Eleanor B. Campbell was an early twentieth century illustrator of children's books and portrait artist.

Education and career

Campbell was from Philadelphia, and spent part of her childhood in Seattle, Washington. Both her parents had studied art, and one of her sisters was Elizabeth Campbell Warhanik, an artist and one of the founders of Women Painters of Washington. Campbell studied at the Sorbonne. She illustrated children's books, especially for the P. F. Volland Company and Scott Foresman. A review of Roberta Goes Adventuring described Campbell as "the artist who knows all about little boys and girls as well as little black dogs with little pink tongues."
Campbell was the first illustrator of the Dick and Jane series of beginning readers created by Zerna Sharp. Her watercolors for the series were intended to show "scenes as a child might see the world", including everyday activities such as when "a preschooler tries to give a teddy bear a drink at a water fountain or dress up in their parents' clothes or help mom take the laundry down from the line before the rain starts." Campbell based her illustrations on photographs she took of her friends' and relations' children. An exhibition of 50 of Campbell's original artworks for the series, held at the Lakeview Museum of Arts and Sciences, was so popular that it was extended from the planned three months to seventeen months. The Dick and Jane illustrations have been criticised for reinforcing class, race and gender stereotypes.
Campbell's illustrations also featured in advertising for Kellogg's and Weatena cereals.
Campbell lived in Seattle after retiring, and died there in 1986.

Selected publications