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Marc Simont (1915-2013), award-winning illustrator, Lakeville Journal cartoonist

WEST CORNWALL — Marc Simont, the celebrated cartoonist, illustrator and author (and longtime contributor to the viewpoint page of The Lakeville Journal), died at his home in West Cornwall on July 13 at the age of 97. Click here for a full obituary.

The loss is sorely felt by all at The Lakeville Journal. A world traveler with wide-ranging interests, Simont often shared political cartoons with The Lakeville Journal that touched on local and national issues. He felt deeply about world affairs and expressed those views in his erudite, subtle and often cutting cartoons. 

Simont was born in Paris in 1915, and showed a talent for illustration early on. He did his first artistic piece at age two-and-a half (a collaboration with his father, where Marc contributed mostly scribbles) and published his first illustrations in a children’s book in 1939.

Artistic passion often kept Simont from paying attention in school. In a 1957 interview Simont even commented, “I was so bad in school I never thought of anything but being an artist.”

He moved to New Rochelle, N.Y., in 1926 but then returned to Paris in 1933 to study art at the Academie Julian and André Lhote. He then finished his schooling at the National Academy of Design in New York. There he met the author and illustrator Robert McCloskey. They shared an apartment together — and while McCloskey was working on the illustrations for “Make Way for Ducklings,” they had ducks living in the bathtub in their apartment. 

Simont met his wife, Sara  “Bee” Dalton, in Fort Bragg, N.C., after he had been sent to illustrate and create military publications in the early 1940s. They married in April 1945, and had a son together, Marc Dalton Simont, whom they nicknamed “Doc.” They moved to West Cornwall in 1948.

Simont illustrated more than 100 books, including many by James Thurber (also a Cornwall resident) and the popular Nate the Great series by Marjorie Weinman Sharmat. He also wrote and illustrated 11 books of his own. In 1957, he won the Caldecott Medal for United States Children’s Book Illustration for his work in “A Tree Is Nice.” 

“The Stray Dog” (which he wrote and illustrated) and “The Happy Day,” by Ruth Krauss with illustrations by Simont, were both Caldecott Honor Books. 

Last March the Cornwall Library hosted an event called “The World of Marc Simont,” with an exhibition of his work, readings of some of his stories and a presentation about his life by Tom Walker, a close friend of Simont’s son, Doc.

Although Walker recounted humorous tales and many memories, he also gave the audience an insight into Simont’s keen ability to perceive and understand the world around him.

He gave the impression that Simont’s characters were not just doodles. Made with care and detail, his cartoons breathed life into the words they followed and gave stories a simplistic yet exceptional reality.

He expressed the sentiment that Simont’s life was, at once, perfectly normal and tremendously exceptional.

Simont had a huge impact on the Cornwall community. He will, undoubtedly, not only be remembered for his numerous illustrations and accomplishments, but also for his wonderful sense of humor, honorable character and amiable disposition.

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