Marian
Van Landingham: Artist, State Delegate, Founder
By Christa Watters
September 20, 2007

Photo
by Nina Tisara
Marian
Van Landingham in front
of a selection of her
paintings.
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Marian
Van Landingham is the sixth of 12 Living Legends
for 2007 whose lives will be chronicled in the
Alexandria Gazette Packet, this year. They are
being chosen from the list of 49 people
nominated by you. Living Legends of Alexandria
will be an ongoing project that documents the
lives of individuals who have made tangible
contributions to the quality of life in
Alexandria.
Marian Van Landingham founded the Torpedo
Factory Art Center, which opened on the
waterfront in 1974. She also represented the
45th District in the Virginia House of Delegates
for 24 years, from 1982 to 2006. During all that
time she was also a working artist with a studio
in the Torpedo Factory.
Born in Albany, Georgia on Sept. 10, 1937, Van
Landingham earned bachelor’s and master’s
degrees in political science from Emory
University. After working in public relations
jobs in Atlanta, she came to work in Washington,
first at the National Air Pollution Agency, and
then as a speechwriter for the late U.S. Rep.
Phillip M. Landrum (D-GA). She found an
apartment in Shirlington, where she lived from
1967 to 1971, and joined the Art League when it
was housed in Parkington (now Ballston). When it
moved to 315 Cameron St. in Alexandria in 1971,
she followed along, finding a "totally
unreconstructed" apartment on the third
floor of a building at the corner of Cameron and
North Pitt streets. Its great advantage was that
it was just a block from the Art League, she
said. Meanwhile, having found writing speeches
rather boring, she cut back her job to part-time
and began freelancing in public relations work
in Alexandria. "I didn’t have to go into
Washington any more. It was a kind of breaking
free."
By 1973, she had become president of the Art
League, and the League had outgrown its space on
Cameron Street. "I was getting
discouraged," she recalled. Even the worst
spaces were too expensive. One of her part-time
jobs was in Alexandria’s Bicentennial office.
(The Alexandria Bicentennial of 1974 celebrated
the 1774 Fairfax Resolves, an early statement
predating the Declaration of Independence and
principally composed by George Mason back when
Alexandria was a part of Fairfax County.) The
head of the Alexandria Bicentennial Commission
was Jim Coldsmith, then editor of the Alexandria
Journal. In her 1999 book, "On Target,
Stories of the Torpedo Factory Art Center’s
First 25 Years," Van Landingham recalled
his suggestion: "Why not consider the
Torpedo Plant," he asked. "The City
doesn’t know what to do with it."
So began her effort to turn the former torpedo
factory, built in the early 1900s to produce
torpedoes for use in World War I, into the art
center that has become a worldwide model. When
she first looked at the factory, it was filled
with old government office furniture,
Smithsonian Institution storage items, federal
documents from World War II, including the
records of the Nuremburg Trials, and layers of
encrusted pigeon dung. The three blocks of
buildings were considered a blight on the
waterfront, and because they were so different
from the 18th and 19th century buildings that
predominated in the area, many citizens wanted
them knocked down.
Van Landingham had a different idea: She drew up
plans that would make space not just for the Art
League’s galleries and classrooms, but also
for artists’ studios. There was evidence that
people are curious about how artists work, and
she thought open studios would attract visitors
to watch painters, sculptors, printmakers,
potters, jewelers, stained glass workers and
makers of musical instruments. She pitched the
art center as a modest, 3-year experiment, and
with support from the Bicentennial Commission,
the City, under then-Mayor Chuck Beatley,
eventually authorized original funding of
$140,000 to clean up one of the old buildings
and make it usable. The government began moving
its stored materials out of the building, and in
the spring of 1974, the artists began cleaning
and painting.
The Torpedo Factory Art Center (TFAC) celebrated
its official opening Sept. 15, 1974, and soon
became a major tourist attraction and the heart
of new projects to redevelop the waterfront and
the historic part of the city. As the first
director, Van Landingham was front and center in
the effort, leading not just with ideas and
organizationally, but physically with labor.
"About every three days (during the
original cleanup), I went to Duron Paint and
bought about 15 gallons of antique white.
Everything was dirty government green with rat
footprints," she recalled. "We had
three 16-foot extension poles with rollers to do
the upper walls of spaces with 20-foot
ceilings," she remembers. The artists still
hold an annual painting party to spruce up the
interior.
Margaret Mayer, the Factory’s first assistant
director remembers when it had no air
conditioning, and the offices she and Marian
shared had leaky roofs. "I remember Marian
getting up on the roof with a bucket of tar to
fix the leaks — and ruining her white
sneakers," said Mayer.
The artists acquired some of the stored
furniture that the government didn’t want to
bother moving. Among the finds were 12 mahogany
table legs, wrapped in paper covered with pigeon
dung, which Van Landingham traded to the City
carpenter in exchange for labor. Today they are
the legs of the massive official table in the
Council Work Room at City Hall.
The way the factory operates has evolved over
the years, but the basic principles remain the
same. The artists must work a certain number of
hours per week in the studios, which cannot
simply be little galleries with paid sales
staff. Prior to 9/11 the factory drew about
750,000 visitors a year. Since then, the numbers
are down a bit, but the TFAC remains the
city’s single biggest tourist attraction.
THE ARTISTS from the early days of the Torpedo
Factory remember how much fun it was. Mayer
recalled free artists’ parties, so crowded
they had to limit access and only let more
people in when others left. John and Luray
Schaffner, now retired to Southern Maryland, had
a studio there from the start, often bringing
along their two children. Son Shawn helped man
the first information desk when he was only
about 10. Sculptor Larry Morris has fond
memories of a "very Bohemian art community
that provided a nurturing atmosphere for my
career, allowing me to thrive as a working
artist."
Jolande Goldberg, another sculptor, said,
"Marian was open to anything that was
aesthetic and made artistic sense. She has a
very fine eye, and this applies to her political
work too. She is a very calm presenter — not
that she lacks passion, but she can contain it.
That’s really key to her success."
Mary Ann Stevens, one of the original artists at
the TFAC, said that having a real studio made a
huge difference to artists who had previously
worked part-time at home. "Without her, I
would never have had an art career, I don’t
think," said Stevens. "Marian has
always been able to use both sides of her brain
successfully," added Stevens. "She’s
both an artist and a successful
politician."
Andra Patterson, a painter, was president of the
TFAC Artists Association from 2003 to 2005,
during the time the Factory suffered hurricane
flood damage. "She was my mentor, always
available. In a long meeting of 100 or so
artists, she would listen to everything, and
then in two sentences, cut to the heart of the
matter."
Artist Marsha Staiger has known Van Landingham
for 10 years, and says, "She motivates
everyone who comes in contact with her to think
outside their own sphere."
In 1975, Van Landingham encouraged Phyllis Cohen
and another printmaker from the Art League to
set up a printmaker’s group. The Printmakers
opened on the third floor of the Factory in June
of that year, with Van Landingham as a member.
Cohen and others are still there, though Van
Landingham moved on to other media and is today
a painter of large oils. "I have always
felt that that day in her office changed my
life. It allowed us to do what we wanted in our
lives — our art — in addition to our
families," said Cohen. "It gave us a
sense of community, interchange between artists
on a daily basis, and it broke the isolation of
working at home alone."
"BECAUSE IT IS a concrete reality, so
visible in the City, the Torpedo Factory is what
people will remember me for — more so,
probably, than for the 24 years of legislative
service," Van Landingham said. She’s
proud of her work on the Appropriations
Committee, particularly the Public Education
subcommittee, which she chaired near the end of
her service, and of her efforts to increase
funding for the aging, mental health, Medicaid,
childcare, help for the homeless. "There
was never enough money to go around," she
said, but she successfully advocated for human
services funding for projects in Alexandria and
elsewhere. She also served on the Privileges and
Elections Committee and the Militia, Police and
Public Safety Committee.
The early campaigns were tough. She had little
money, and needed to gain name recognition. She
ran first in 1981 and lost, then ran again and
won in1982. Lois Walker, who managed Van
Landingham’s early campaigns, remembers it as
exhausting work. "Marian is one of the most
stubborn, tenacious people I’ve ever met,
really a determined person, said Walker.
"She would get up and walk 100 houses a day
when campaigning, knocking on doors, talking to
people, leaving notes for those not home.
She’s tall, and she walked fast. I always felt
as though I was running to keep up." One of
the things that helped Van Landingham succeed in
the House of Delegates, Walker believes, is that
"She talks Georgian. She is truly southern,
and could talk to all those southern gentlemen
in the legislature."
Longtime aide Harlene Clayton, said,
"Marian truly legislated from the heart.
She cared deeply for those less fortunate and
who needed a spokesperson on their behalf….
She was also a true advocate of equal justice
for all of the citizens of the
Commonwealth." Clayton said Van Landingham
always maintained an open door to Alexandria
constituents. "And on the campaign trail,
when the going got tough, Marian was a real
trooper."
Many of Van Landingham’s friends and
colleagues mentioned her persistence and
toughness, her humor and her wit. Printmaker and
painter Nancy Reinke, who has known her from the
factory’s beginnings, commented on her
well-known love of puns. But above all, she
said, Marian is an artist. Others, she said,
"may speak of her power and prestige as a
brilliant legislator and policy maker." But
inside the Torpedo Factory, Reinke said,
"She is one of us: a talented, prolific
painter and a valued friend."
"Living Legends of Alexandria" is a
project of the Rotary Club of Alexandria in
partnership with the Alexandria Gazette Packet.
Nina Tisara is Project Director
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