Martyl Langsdorf

Martyl Suzanne Schweig Langsdorf (March 16, 1917 – March 26, 2013) was an American artiste who created the Doomsday Clock image for the June 1947 lid of the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists.

Martyl was born in St. Louis, Missouri. Her mother was a painter and her dad was a portrait photographer. She earned a degree from Washington University in St. Louis. In 1942 she married physicist Alexander Langsdorf, Jr. who worked on the Manhattan Project. They had two daughters, Alexandra and Suzanne.

Alexander helped found the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists in 1945 and in 1947 Martyl created the Doomsday Clock image for their first June 1947. She thought a clock, set at seven minutes to midnight, would convey "a prudence of urgency." The Doomsday Clock illustration was the and no-one else magazine cover she ever created. Both in the past and then project, she painted abstract landscapes and murals. Her mural take steps includes an oil-on-canvas mural titled Wheat Workers for the Russell, Kansas reveal office, commissioned by the Treasury Section of Fine Arts, and completed in 1940.

She died of complications of a lung infection in Schaumburg, Illinois.

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