LETTERS From CAMP Rehoboth |
PAST Out |
byLiz Highleyman |
Who was Tove Jansson?
Lesbian author Tove Jansson is perhaps the best-known contemporary Finnish writer outside her native country. Although her Moomintroll children's stories never achieved major popularity in the United States, Jansson became a household name in Europe, and the Moomins are better known than Disney characters among children in Japan. Jansson, the eldest daughter of a bohemian family that was part of the Swedish minority community in Finland, was born in Helsinki in August 1914, at the dawn of World War I. Her father was a well-known sculptor, her mother was an illustrator, and all three Jansson children would go on to become artists themselves. As a teenager, Jansson's illustrations were published in children's magazines and in the liberal political publication Garm. At age 15, she left home to attend art school in Stockholm, where she lived with her uncle. She continued her art studies in Helsinki and at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris. Though she traveled widely throughout Europe, she remained close to her family and did not leave home for good until the age of 28. Jansson, who began her career as a painter, had her first exhibition in 1943; she was soon regarded as one of Finland's best up-and-coming young artists. During the 1940s and 1950s, she produced numerous murals and frescoes for public buildings including city halls, schools, and hospitals. Jansson's enduring claim to fame, however, was secured by her Moomin storieswhich she both wrote and illustratedfeaturing the adventures of a family of furry white hippopotamus-like creatures and their extended network of eccentric foster relatives, friends, and hangers-on of various fantastical species. Jansson later recounted that she first drew the Moomintroll figure on an outhouse wall as an ugly caricature of the philosopher Immanuel Kant. It then accompanied her signature on her political cartoons in Garm in the late 1930s, including one depicting the leaders of Europe placating a diaper-clad baby Hitler with pieces of cake. A cuter, chubbier version of the character appeared in a series of books, beginning in 1945 with The Small Trolls and the Great Flood. The next two installments, Comet in Moominland (1946) and The Finn Family Moomintroll (1948), were translated into English and garnered widespread acclaim. In 1953, the London Evening News asked Jansson to create a comic strip based on the Moomin characters; it was serialized in 40 countries, bringing her international fame. She continued the series until 1959, when she turned it over to her younger brother Lars. Though written at a children's reading level, the tales were also popular with adults. Set in Moominvalleywhere "everyone did what they liked and seldom worried about tomorrow"the stories projected an appreciation of diversity, a love of nature, and the importance of being true to oneself. Her characters often gave voice to Jansson's longing for freedom and independence. "Possession means worries and luggage bags one has to drag along," her alter ego, Little My, states in one book. "One can never be entirely free, if one admires someone else too much," adds the inveterate rambler Snufkin. The popularity of the stories gave rise to an industry of spin-off merchandise and theme parks. The "muumibuumi" (Moomin Boom) in Europe and Japan first emerged in the 1960s, and enjoyed a revival in the 1990s with the production of a new television series. But her role as a national icon began to wear on Jansson, and she increasingly sought respite in solitude. Though briefly engaged in her twenties, Jansson never married and did not have children of her own. After relationships with a number of women, she settled down in the 1960s with her long-time companion, graphic artist Tuulikki Pietil, on a remote island in the Gulf of Finland, near where she had spent her childhood summers. Pietil was the inspiration for the sensible butch character Too-ticky in the later Moomin tales. "All things are so very uncertain, and that's exactly what makes me feel so reassured," Too-ticky says in the final installment. Jansson and Pietilnicknamed "Tooti"were among the first openly lesbian public figures in Finland. Though she displayed the characteristic Swedish circumspection about her private life, Jansson made no effort to hide the relationship, attending public functions such as the elite Independence Day Ball at the Presidential Palace with Pietil as her escort. After publishing her final Moomin book in 1970, Jansson wrote several novels and short stories for adult audiences, among them The Summer Book (1972)one of the few translated into Englishand a collaboration with Pietil, Notes from an Island (1996). After a period of declining health, Janssen died in Helsinki in June 2001, at the age of 86. "I have not wished to philosophize or educate anyone," Jansson once wrote, "but have amused principally myself with my stories." Nevertheless, she garnered numerous honors in her native land and beyond, including the Finnish State Award in literature, the Hans Christian Andersen Medal for children's literature, and the Prize of the Swedish Academy; in 1995, the president of Finland named her an honorary professor. Liz Highleyman can be reached at PastOut@qsyndicate.com. |
LETTERS From CAMP Rehoboth, Vol. 16, No.8 June 30, 2006 |