
Susanna
Oroyan 1942 - 2007
Susanna Oroyan
began making dolls seriously in 1972 and was elected to NIADA
in 1982. She was proficient in a variety of media, including polymer
clay, paperclay, and cloth. Her dollmaking style was never static
but evolved constantly. In addition to dollmaking, Susanna taught
extensively all over the US and in Australia, self-published booklets
and designed cloth doll patterns sold through her Fabricat Designs
company, participated actively in local and regional UFDC activities
and conventions and in local doll clubs in Oregon.
In the 1980s
there was very little information on artist dolls; Susanna saw
the need and filled it. She was by far the biggest contributor
of articles both for and about doll artists and doll art for many
years. Doll Reader made Susanna a regular columnist, and it was
through her column and other articles that many doll artists learned
about NIADA. Later she was a contributor to other doll magazines,
and by the mid-1990s there was probably not a doll publication
that had not printed one or more of her articles. In something
over twenty years, Susanna published over 300 articles. Because
of her high visibility, Susanna was contacted by hundreds of aspiring
doll artists with questions on everything from materials and methods
to business and legal practices. She spent countless hours answering
their letters, taking their phone calls, looking at pictures of
their work, and mentoring many of them.
She saw the
need for a good-quality artist doll book and in 1986 Hobby House
Press published Contemporary Artist Dolls, co-written with Carol-Lynn
Rossel Waugh. Other than the two black & white American Doll
Artist books by Helen Bullard [founder of NIADA], this may have
been the only US book on artist dolls by a variety of artists
for some years, and the first large-format book. How-to dollmaking
books had been in short supply, but a few artists began to publish
books on doll-making from the mid-1980s on, most of which were
specific to their particular media. Seeing the need for a comprehensive
dollmaking book that gave guidance in a variety of methods but
promoted no one technique, Susanna published the first of 4 very
successful how-to books, Fantastic Figures, in 1994. This was
followed by Anatomy of a Doll in 1997, Designing the Doll in 1999
and Finishing the Figure in 2001. These books are the most widely-read
and most sold dollmaking books, with Anatomy of a Doll having
sold over 40,000 copies as of 1993 – something of a phenomenon
in a market where 2,000-4,000 books sold is considered very good.
Her final book, on one of her favorite subjects, written during
her illness, was Art Deco Dolls.
As well as
providing most of the media publicity and information about NIADA
in the 1980s, Susanna contributed to the organization in many
ways for many years. Most notably she served as President from
1987-1991, but she always said “yes” when asked to
do something for the organization. She gave countless conference
programs, served on the By-laws Committee for several years, and
co-coordinated the Critiques for three years and helped implement
some changes that remain a part of the critique today. She instituted
the original artist demonstrations at conferences in the late
‘80s and co-coordinated them several years when they were
revived in this decade. Susanna probably contributed as much time
to NIADA as any other member over the years, and much more than
most. She provided wise and experienced guidance, had a good head
for business, and was unafraid to handle things that needed to
be deal with. During her illness, Susanna continued to contribute
– doing programs, negotiating with hotels, rewriting by-laws.
NIADA members
and conference attendees prior to the beginning of her illness
in 2001 knew her as fun and funny, with a dry sense of humor and
great energy. Although she attended conferences in ’02,
’03, and ’04, her health kept her at a lower key,
and she is known to more recent members and attendees primarily
from her books. But Susanna Oroyan was a major force in the doll
world for many years – as a doll artist, as a writer and
promoter of art dolls, as a teacher and mentor, as a major contributor
to NIADA in many ways, and as a wonderful friend to many.
FOR
IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Internationally Known Local Author and Artist dies: August 22,
2007
Susanna Oroyan
was born May 24, 1942 in Portland, Oregon daughter of Louis Benjamin
Scruggs and Marjorie Eunice Hibbert Scruggs. She attended Brooklyn
elementary school there and Keizer Elementary School in Salem,
Oregon. She graduated from North Salem High School in 1960 and
went on to attend both the University of Oregon and California
State University at Sacramento. She received a Bachelor of Arts
degree and completed a 5th year in education in California and
a Master of Arts in English from the University of Oregon in 1971.
She was accepted to the Phd. Program in English in 1978 at the
University of Oregon and worked on rhetorical theory under the
direction of Dr. Albert Kitzhaber until his retirement in 1981.
She married Thomas Oroyan of Waimanalo, Oahu, Hawaii in 1962.
Her death was due to a seven year battle with colo-rectal cancer
in her spine.
“I never
had a real job unless you count being the world’s longest
term temporary part-time secretary when I worked eight years for
my husband’s architectural firm. After school, I fell head
over heels into making figure sculpture. This is the construction
of evocative or provocative representation of the human figure.
They are multi-media constructs showing the human condition from
realistic to abstract often seen in museums and galleries. One
of my first pieces, a soft sculpture character, won first place
in the sculpture division of the All Oregon Art Sow in 1975. By
1980, I had begun to sculpt with oven curing clays and I was honored
to be elected an artist member of the National Institute of American
Doll Artists in 1982.”
As a member
of NIADA, Oroyan served on the Board and as President of the organization
from 1985 to 1992 and remained an active committee member until
2004.
“Throughout
my doll making years, I wrote to promote the art and the artist’s.”
Over the years, Oroyan produced over 300 articles for various
journals and was a contracted as a consultant to Hobby House Press
from 1987 until its sale in 1994. After leaving office work in
1988, with her husband’s illustrations, she founded a line
of teaching patterns and booklets under the name of Fabricat design.
One thing led to another and she was soon “on the road”
teaching sculpture to various art and doll groups in places as
far away as Australia and she taught on the regular rotation of
the Annual American Quilt Festival in Houston during the 1990s.
In 1992, one of her Fabricat publications brought her to the attention
of C&T publishing. With them, again with her husband’s
illustrations, she wrote and published a series of seminal books
on the techniques and design of figure sculpture: Fantastic Figure,
1994; Anatomy of the Doll, 1997; Designing the Doll, 1999; Finishing
the Figure, 2001; and Art Deco Dolls in 2004. Anatomy of the Doll
was honored by Scientific American magazine as Best Technical
book for Youth in 1997. Oroyan also received the award for Best
Dollmaker of the year for teaching and publication from the National
Association of Cloth Doll Makers in 1995.
Oroyan’s
art—close to 500 pieces in collections around the world,
including the Musee des Jouets at the Louvre in Paris- was noted
for whimsy and the avant-garde in figures. She is probably most
known for her 60 piece one-of-a-kind Mulliner Family series and,
in later years, for the Empresses of the Universe series. “It
was always the challenge of getting the idea engineered into a
three dimensional reality. How does an Empress of the Universe
get around? With built in sails, some on abstract wind-sail contraptions,
and one with a pogo stick.” The Mulliner English eccentric
figures were fun for all. I made up an elaborate family tree and
a basic story for each one. Owners became members of the Mulliner
Family Conservancy. Throughout history, it seems Mulliners were
very acquisitive so their owner/conservators often collect items
and make settings to show off their possessions.”
Locally, Oroyan
worked with Kathy Jensen, curator of the Springfield Museum to
mount highly attended exhibits of figurative art from as many
as 150 internationally known artists in 1991 and 1994. In 2001
over 80 pieces of her own work was featured there in as the main
gallery retrospective. She also was a founder of the annual Doll
and Toy Festival held at the Fairgrounds every fall and co-chaired
it for ten years of its 20 year history. Oroyan was also a charter
member of the Eugene Doll Club in 1971 and Pacific NW Paper Doll
Collectors and helped found the Doll and Toy Craftsmen and the
Stitchin’ Time Cloth doll clubs in the area. As an active
member, she chaired the United Federation of Doll Clubs’
1985 Regional Conference, noted for taking its 500 attendees to
a performance of the Eugene Ballet. During the same year she completed
her first book, Contemporary Artist Dolls published in 1986, co-authored
with Carol-Lynn Rossel Waugh, and edited the conference limited
edition journal, “44 Famous Paper Doll Artists.” Again,
for the 1994 Conference, she wrote and produced a book on Art
Deco dolls and their stories as its limited edition journal.
During the
years of her illness and treatment she continued to be active,
completing the book Finishing the Figure and Dolls of the Art
Deco Era as well as occasional contributions of articles to various
doll making journals. In 2003, she was named consulting editor
for Art Doll Quarterly, a publication of Stampington Press. “I
am never going to say “retired,” but, even though
I never thought of myself as a collector, I find I have numbers
of older dolls. They always need new clothes or at the very least
new display formats so I always have several working messes which
seem to evolve into topics for more articles.”
“It
has been a wonderful, fascinating and busy life, but I could never
have done it without the support of my family and friends. My
mother, who did not expect to have to re-mother at an age when
she should have been smelling the roses and especially, my husband,
Tom have worked over and beyond. In addition to being my teacher,
critic, and translator of ideas into illustrations, in recent
years, he has taken on domestic chores and nursing—often
getting up three times in a work night to help me be comfortable—putting
his own physical condition at risk of deterioration. There are
simply no words that can express my love for him. Some people
are lucky in love and I was especially blessed.”
Susanna is
survived by her husband Thomas Oroyan, her mother Eunice Scruggs
of Eugene, brother David Scruggs of Portland, son Martin and grandchildren
Ruby and Tycho Benjamin Oroyan of London, England, cousins in
the Eugene-Springfield area, Portland and Seattle, and by marriage
“Auntie Susie” to 35 nieces and nephews, their children,
and grand-children in Hawaii.
A
Personal Tribute...
I don't want
a world without Susanna in it, & therefore, I am going to
always remember her wit & mischievous charm, her outrageous
originality, her incredible loyalty, her sterling-silver-love
of family, friends & furries, her boundless energy towards
any project she was working on or with, her razor-sharp intellect,
her organizational abilities, whether for her husband's business
or running a NIADA Conference, her love of gossip, her interest
in ballet & musical theater, her love of exploring the world,
& her abject fearlessness.
I'll remember
she loves music but can't carry a tune.
I'll remember
all the times I came to her with problems professional & private,
& she listened & lots of times, provided a solution.
I'll remember
that mega-watt smile & the way she pulled little pieces off
her bread rolls before she ate them. I'll remember all that crazy
coffee-drinking & smoking, until our room was blue---I had
to quit rooming with her at Conferences because I couldn't take
the smoke.
I'll remember
talking way late into the night, until all I could manage would
be, "ummm"---for all I know she talked all the rest
of the night, because she was darned hard to wake up the next
morning for NIADA functions.
I'll remember
her profound fidelity to the Democratic Party & that book
she was going to write: "The Oroyan Explanation of All Things".
I won't forget the faithfulness of her friendship, through good
times & bad, & the way she could argue her positions,
sometimes with page after page of coherent thought until I had
to say, "You're probably right but I still think what I think."
& she never held a grudge about it.
I'll remember
all the time & interest she spent on cataloguing her ancestors,
& that twinkling satisfaction she radiated when she'd slipped
a bid in at the last second on an eBay auction & won some
small antique bisque doll.
I'll remember
the fun she had making costumes & concocting intricate histories
for her own creations, & for her collected dolls, too. And
those extraordinary, unique Christmas presents--we both love reading
mysteries & one year she made for me a red velvet-covered,
"blood-stained" box with the "personal business
cards" of 48 fictional Detectives, each with appropriate
type-face & decoration, according to era & location.
I'll remember
looking forward every morning since 2000 when I got my first computer,
(until she became too ill to write), to seeing her email to me,
since she seemed to stay up all night & write emails in the
small hours.
It's good
to remember her nurturing of other artists, & the way she
would always have time to answer, give opinions & critiques
& advice, to the numberless artists & would-be artists
who wrote & called her. I know she was still doing this nurturing
deep into her illness, long after anybody else would've stopped
that altogether.
I'll remember
all the endless hours of work she gave to NIADA & to her Eugene
Doll Clubs. Then there are all her books, & articles &
teaching-events, but I won't be thinking much about that professional
Susanna Oroyan; I'll be missing & remembering a dear personal
friend of over 28 years' time, whose loss leaves a gigantic hole
in my life & who can never be replaced.
Susanna added so much color & sparkle to my world---I am so
lucky to have known her & to have been her friend.
Elizabeth Brandon
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