Feodor Stepanovich Rojankovsky
Feodor Stepanovich "Rojan" Rojankovsky , also known as Rojan, was a Russian émigré illustrator. He is well known both for children's book illustration and for erotic art. He won the 1956 Caldecott Medal for U.S. picture book illustration from the American Library Association, recognizing Frog Went A-Courtin' by John Langstaff.
Biography
Rojankovsky was born in Mitava, Courland Governorate of the Russian Empire on December 24, 1891 to Lydia Kiprianova and Stepan Fedorovich Rojankovsky. After Stephan's death in 1897, the family moved to St. Petersburg to be closer to his older married sister. There, Rojan's interest in books grew, particularly natural history picture books and illustrated classics. He studied two years at the private Moscow School of Painting, Sculpture and Architecture but left in 1914 to serve in the Imperial Russian Army during World War I where he served as Staff Captain of one of the first motorized units until 1917. His first work appeared in the May 1915 issue of the magazine Lukomor’e where he depicted war scenes during his bed rest after being wounded in battle.After the war, Rojankovsky joined his siblings in Ukraine and worked as an artist for the local district council where some of his projects were illustrating books for local schools. He was conscripted by the White Army in 1919, soon to be a prisoner of war in Poland. After the war, he stayed in Poland working with Polish bookseller and publisher Rudolf Wegner designing book covers and illustrating whole books. After the Rapallo Treaty of 1922 recognized the new Soviet Union, he was unable to return to Russia with his Tsarist papers and became a stateless person and moved to France in 1925 where he worked as an art director for Lecram Press. His work for Lecram caught Esther Averill's attention and he began collaborating with Averill and her business partner, Lila Stanley. With their insight, Rojankovsky created Daniel Boone in 1931 featuring fauvist-inspired lithographs celebrating Boone and the American West. The plates were prohibitive to print, so Averill and Stanley started their own Domino Press to print the book. Daniel Boone set a new direction in children's books, but was not a commercial success. In 1933, he began working with Paul Faucher on the Père Castor series. The series integrated bold coloring with games, stories or projects designed to stimulate a child's curiosity and imagination.
In 1941, he moved to the US and began a career of illustrating more than a hundred books, most featuring animals or nature with Little Golden Books. From 1943 to 1970, Rojan illustrated 35 children's books under the imprint. Rojankovsky also wrote books, such as The Great Big Animal Book, published in 1952. In 1956, Frog Went A-Courtin'
Rojan died on October 12, 1970 in Bronxville, New York.
Quote
"Two great events determined the course of my childhood. I was taken to the zoo and saw the most marvelous creatures on earth: bears, tigers, monkeys and reindeer, and, while my admiration was running high, I was given a set of color crayons. Naturally, I began immediately to depict the animals which captured my imagination. Also when my elder brothers, who were in schools in the capital, came home for vacation, I tried to copy their drawings and to imitate their paintings."Books
As writer and illustrator
- Daniel Boone: les adventures d'un chasseur americain parmi les peaux-rouges
- The Tall Book of Mother Goose
- Grandfather’s Farm Panorama: Ten Feet Long
- Choo-choo Panorama
- The Three Bears
- Favorite Fairy Tales
- Farm Animals
- The Great Big Animal Book
- The Great Big Wild Animal Book
- The Great Big Animal Book
- Little Golden Mother Goose
- The Outside Cat
- Animals on the Farm
- Animals in the Zoo
- The Dog and Cat Book
- An Alphabet of Many Things
- The Tall Book of Mother Goose
With other writers
- Flash: The Story of a Horse, a Coach-Dog and the Gypsies, written by Esther Averill
- Bourru, the Brown Bear, Written by Rose Fyleman and Lida
- Fluff, the Little Wild Rabbit, written by Lida, translated by Georges Duplaix
- The Children’s Year, written by Y. Lacôte
- Adventures of Dudley and Gilderoy, written by Algernon Blackwood and Marion B. Cothren
- Cuckoo, written by Lida
- How the Camel Got His Hump, written by Rudyard Kipling
- How the Leopard Got His Spots, written by Rudyard Kipling
- How the Rhinoceros Got His Skin, written by Rudyard Kipling
- The Cat That Walked by Himself, written by Rudyard Kipling
- The Elephant’s Child, written by Rudyard Kipling, Junior Literary Guild Award
- The Golden Book of Birds, written by Hazel Lockwood
- Animal Stories, written by Georges Duplaix
- Cortez the Conqueror, written by Covelle Newcomb
- The Butterfly that Stamped, written by Rudyard Kipling
- Big Farmer Big and Little Farmer Little, written by Byron and Kathryn Jackson
- Gaston and Josephine, written by Georges Duplaix
- Our Puppy, written by Elsa Ruth Nast
- The Big Elephant, written by Kathryn Jackson
- All Alone, written by Claire Huchet Bishop, Newbery Honor Book
- The Giant Golden Book of Cat Stories, written by Elizabeth Coatsworth
- The Giant Golden Book of Dog Stories, written by Elizabeth Coatsworth
- Horse Stories, written by Kate Barnes and Elizabeth Coatsworth
- Frog Went A-Courtin'
, written by John Langstaff - I Play at the Beach,
written by Dorothy Koch - Balboa, Swordsman an
d Conquistador, written by Felix Riesenberg, Jr. - Cartier Sails the St. Lawrence, written by Esther Averill
- I Like the City, wri
tten by James L. Mursell - I Like the Country,
written by James L. Mursell - Over in the Meadow,
written by John Langstaff The Giant Golden Boo k of Dogs, Cats and Horses, written by Kate Barnes and Elizabeth Coatsworth - The White Bunny and His Magic Nose, written by Lily Duplaix
- Baby Wild Animals, w
ritten by John Wallace Purcell - The Cabin Faced West, written by Jean Fritz
- The Little River, wr
itten by Ann Rand - Animal Dictionary, written by Jane Werner Watson
- The Defender, written by Nicholas Kalashnikoff, Newbery Honor Book
- The Whilry Bird, written by Dimitry Varley
- Cricket in a Thicket, written by Aileen Fisher
- I Can Count, written by Carl Memling
- The Cow Went Over the Mountain, written by Jeanette Krinsley
- Hop, Little Kangaroo, written by Patricia Scarry
- Christmas Bear, written by Marie Colmont, translated by Constance Hirsch
- I Am a Fox, written by Ole Risom
- A Crowd of Cows, written by John Graham
- The Falcon Under the Hat: Russian Merry Tales and Fairy Tales, selected and translated by Guy Daniels
- To Make a Duck Happy, written by Carol E. Lester
- The Giant Golden Bible, written by Elsa Jane Werner