Archive for the ‘biography’ Category

Saturday, November 13th, 2010

Biography: Al Parker

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Birth/Death

Birth: 1906
Death: 1985

Occupation/Title

Illustrator

Bio Summary

Al Parker was born in Saint Louis, Missouri in 1906. He graduated from Washington University School of Art in 1928. In 1935 he moved to New York where he got his first break by submitting winning cover art for a contest by House Beautiful.

His reputation spread to other publications and soon his fresh, innovative work was in high demand. Parker secured his career as an illustrator with his famous “Mother and Daughter” cover series for Ladies Home Journal. The covers identified the publication for the next 17 years.

He married his college sweetheart Evelyn. They had 2 sons, Kit and Jay, and a daughter, Susan.

Early Life/Family

His artistic talent was notable from an early age. Though his grandfather helped pay for the first year at Washington University School of Art, Parker had to pay most of his tuition himself by playing the saxophone, clarinet, and drums in a local jazz band.

Education/Training

Graduated from Washington University’s School of Art, Saint Louis, Missouri, in 1928.

Career Outline

His illustrations highlighted publications such as Cosmopolitan, Ladies Home Journal, Good Housekeeping, House Beautiful, McCalls, Sports Illustrated, Collier’s, The Saturday Evening Post, and Vogue.

Parker is noted as perhaps the most important illustrative and graphic design influence of the 40’s, 50’s, and 60’s. His works captured the idealized suburban lifestyle, and the evolving cultural roles of women and their families. Though his illustrations were often considered bold, he never lost the feeling of warmth and tenderness in his subjects.

He heavily inspired so many illustrators that he needed to change his style constantly to stand out from everyone else. Parker is also credited for inspiring his readers to match the trends of the day, as he always portrayed his women in the latest fashions.

Comments On Style

Parker was a master of many different styles and mediums. He is best known for his bold, flat colors and shapes, and his modernist linework and use of patterns together with fashionable women. His dynamic and innovative ventures into the world of illustration helped define the unique visual style of the era. Parker’s range of skill was so diverse that he once did every illustration in a Cosmopolitan issue in different styles and under different pseudonyms.

Influences

Personality

Described by illustrator Will Davies in a brief anecdote (“A Visit with Al Parker”) as “a real gentleman.”

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

Collectively received 25 awards and honors for his art. Elected to the Illustrator’s Hall of Fame in 1965. Recently awarded with a U.S. postal stamp design.

Related Links

100 Years of Illustration: Al Parker

Bibliographic References

Al Parker Bio

Finding Aid for the Al Parker Collection (HTML version)

A Visit with Al Parker

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Contributors To This Listing

Kelli Buescher

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Saturday, November 13th, 2010

Biography: Norman Rockwell

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Birth/Death
February 3, 1894, in New York City; died November 8, 1978, in Stockbridge, Massachusetts.

Occupation/Title
American painter, Saturday Evening Post illustrator.

Bio Summary

Early Life/Family

Education/Training

Career Outline

Comments On Style

Influences

Personality

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

Related Links

Bibliographic References

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Contributors To This Listing

Enoch Allen

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Saturday, November 13th, 2010

Biography: Albert Dorne

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Birth/Death

Birth: February 7, 1904
Death: December 15, 1965

Occupation/Title

Illustrator

Bio Summary

Dorne’s life was a true “rags to riches” story. He worked as a newsboy, an office boy, a prize fighter, an art studio assistant, and then rose to become a highly respected illustrator, teacher and entrepreneur.

Early Life/Family

As a poor but enterprising “Dead End Kid,” he grew up New York City’s Lower East Side and left school in the seventh grade to help support his family.

Education/Training

Albert Drone had no formal training in art. Through a combination of natural ability and strong drive, he progressed successively from being an unpaid assistant to a commercial artist to one of New York’s most successful advertising artists, while still in his early twenties. He went on to become a leading editorial illustrator.

Career Outline

1947 – Co-founder of the Code of Ethics and Fair Practices of the Profession of Commercial Art and Illustration
1947 to 1948 – President of the New York Society of Illustrators
1948 – Became founder-director of the Famous Artists Schools in Westport, Connecticut

Comments On Style

Albert Dorne’s work is easily recognized as complicated illustrations filled with highly animated characters in exaggerated poses. He worked rather small because he believed that in small scale one was less likely to put in unnecessary details, and that the probability of faithful reproduction would be greater. His medium of choice was colored inks, which he applied with great skill after making meticulous pencil drawings in line.

According to Alex Toth, Albert Drone could draw from imagination without the need for models or photographs; however he kept a huge cross indexed swipe file of over twenty-four drawer filing cabinets.

Influences

Personality

Anecdotes

Miscellaneous

Filmography

Honors

1953 – Gold Medal from the New York Art Directors Club.
1963 – Horatio Alger Award for Achievement from the American Schools and Colleges Association, Inc.
1958 – Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts from Adelphi College.

Related Links

Bibliographic References

Famous American Illustrators by Arpi Ermoyan
The Illustrator in America 1880-1980 by Walt and Roger Reed
Alex Toth edited by Manuel Auad

Contributors To This Listing

L. Luminarias

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