By the late 1930s the citrus growing market in the US had reached its pinnacle output and, wanting to capitalize profits, advertisers focused on the “healthfulness” of their product. Sunkist’s 1938 coloring booklet, The Land of Oranges and Lemons was designed with mothers and teachers in mind. Mirroring the Jack and Jill trope, it depicts two children who visit their Uncle Jim, a worker in the Sunkist factory. Jim tours the children around as they learn about the people who contribute to their morning orange juice. Throughout the text, the advertisers extoll the health benefits of citrus and users are invited to chart their children’s height and weight on the last page.
This collage series combines small watercolor collages based on drawings from the booklet with aspects of the citrus manufacturing process, contemporary and historical advertisements, as well as depictions of common ailments facing citrus today due to climate change and the increased prescience of pests. Although the booklet was created as a toy for children, the phrasing of the narrative has a different meaning in 2022. Uncle Jim tells the children “There is no rain in California in the summer. The water comes from the mountains,” foretelling that many of the challenges of growing citrus in the U.S. have been with us all along.