Merritt Mauzey was an American lithographer and noted children’s book author and illustrator in the mid-20th century. Associated closely with the Dallas Nine group of artists, Mauzey was a self-taught artist known for his depictions of rural life and the cotton industry in his native Texas.
Early life
Merritt Thomas Mauzey was born November 16, 1897 in Clifton, Texas, the seat of Bosque County. He was the last of nine children born to Henry Clay Mauzey, a Civil War veteran who fought for the Union army, and Amanda Crow Mauzey. The family moved to Oak Creek, south of Sweetwater, Texas in 1900 to sharecropcotton; two years later, they bought 160 acres in Decker, a nearby community in Nolan County, to expand their cotton crops. At age 15, Mauzey moved in with a married sister to attend high school in the town of Blackwell. During this time, he took a correspondence class through the Fine Art Institute of Omaha, Nebraska. Mauzey married Margaret Echols in 1916; their only child, Merritt Jr., was born three years later. In 1920, the new family moved to Sweetwater, the nearest large town, and in 1927 relocated to Dallas, where Mauzey worked as a clerk at a cotton exporting firm.
Career
Printmaking
Mauzey began studying etching with North Texas printmaker Frank Klepper and life drawing with Dallas Morning News cartoonist John Knott at Dallas Public Evening School at Dallas High School in 1933. A close associate of the Dallas Nine group of Texas Regionalist artists, Mauzey was a charter member of the experimental Lone Star Printmakers group, which formed in 1938. He bought a lithographic press to print his own work and that of his colleagues, leaving his position at the cotton exporting firm to teach lithography and devote more time to his artwork. Mauzey soon emerged as the “outstanding talent” among the Lone Star Printmakers. The group, whose ranks included notable Texas artists Alexandre Hogue, Otis Dozier, and Dallas Museum of Fine Arts director Jerry Bywaters, showed their work in exhibitions that toured throughout Texas and sold limited edition prints for $5 to $8 each. The Lone Star Printmakers also sold work through noted art historian Carl Zigrosser’s Weyhe Gallery in New York. In 1942, Mauzey was profiled in Zigrosser’s book, The Artist in America: Twenty-four Close-Ups of Contemporary Printmaking. By then a curator at Philadelphia Museum of Art, Zigrosser described Mauzey as "a kind of Rousseau among lithographers" and his work as the “translation of cotton into art” From 1943 to 1962, Mauzey worked full-time at Firestone Rubber Company and devoted his free time to his art. Suffering from exhaustion and a bleeding ulcer, Mauzey was frequently ill and required hospitalization on numerous occasions. Though Regionalism’s popularity waned after World War II, Mauzey continued to produce prints and focused his efforts on creating children’s books illustrated with his lithography. Between 1955 and 1964, he wrote and illustrated six popular children’s books about farming and rural life.