Interestingly, Anton Franciscus Pieck, a Dutch painter, artist and graphic artist, had a twin brother Henri Christiaan Pieck who was also a painter and illustrator.
In Hattem, the Netherlands, the Anton Pieck Museum, called "House for Anton Pieck" was opened in 1984.
(antonpieck.eu)
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Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label illustration. Show all posts
Wednesday
Thursday
Tuesday
Edmund Dulac (1882-1953) French illustrator
French book and magazine illustrator, Edmund Dulac was born in Toulouse, France. Dulac studied at the Ecole des Beaux Arts in Paris, later he moved to London. He also designed bank notes and post stamps.
Labels:
20th century,
French artists,
illustration
Saturday
J. C. Leyendecker ( 1874-1951) American illustrator
Joseph Christian Leyendecker, famous American illustrator, was known for his poster, book, advertising illustrations and numerous covers for The Saturday Evening Post. Leyendecker painted more than 400 magazine covers, 322 for The Saturday Evening Post alone during the Golden Age of American Illustration. Leyendecker was born in Germany, his family immigrated to Chicago in 1882. J. C. Leyendecker received his formal artistic training at the school of the Chicago Art Institute and later he and his younger brother Frank enrolled in the Académie Julian in Paris for a year, where they were exposed to the work of Toulouse-Lautrec, Jules Chéret, and also Alphonse Mucha, a leader in the French Art Nouveau movement.
Leyendecker never married, he was able to indulge in a very luxurious lifestyle and was known for the famous gala-like social gatherings in the 1920s. For much of his adult life Leyendecker lived with another man, Charles Beach who is assumed to have been his lover and who was the original model of the famous Arrow Collar Man. Leyendecker was a chief influence upon his friend Norman Rockwell, Leyendecker's drawing style was cited as a major influence on the character designs of Team Fortress 2, a first person shooter game for the PC, Xbox 360, and PlayStation 3. (wikipedia)
Leyendecker never married, he was able to indulge in a very luxurious lifestyle and was known for the famous gala-like social gatherings in the 1920s. For much of his adult life Leyendecker lived with another man, Charles Beach who is assumed to have been his lover and who was the original model of the famous Arrow Collar Man. Leyendecker was a chief influence upon his friend Norman Rockwell, Leyendecker's drawing style was cited as a major influence on the character designs of Team Fortress 2, a first person shooter game for the PC, Xbox 360, and PlayStation 3. (wikipedia)
Labels:
20th century,
American artists,
graphics,
illustration
Monday
Saturday
Carl August Richter (1770–1848) - German draftsman, engraver, illustrator and landscape painter
Carl August Richter - View of the castle and the Catholic church in Desden, 1830
Carl August Richter - View of the Kuhstall-cave, 1830, etching
Carl August Richter - Bridge between old and new town, 1830s, etching
Carl August Richter - View from the Bastei to Königstein und Liliestein, 1830, etching
Labels:
German artists,
graphics,
illustration,
Landscape Painting
Sunday
Tuesday
Friday
Maurice Leloir (1851-1940) - French Illustrator
A watercolorist, illustrator, engraver and historical painter, Maurice Leloir was born in Paris into a family of well-known artists. His formal training Leloir received with his father historical painter Jean-Baptiste Auguste Leloir, his mother watercolorist Héloïse Colin and his older brother Alexander-Louis Leloir.
A very prominent illustrator, Maurice Leloir was elected President of the French Watercolor Society.
He illustrated works by J.J. Rousseau, J.B. Moliere, H. de Balzac among others.
He also designed theater posters.
In 1906, Maurice Leloir wrote and illustrated a book "the Dictionary of Costume".
In 1928, at the invitation of Douglas Fairbanks, Leloir worked in the US as an art advisor on the film The Man in the Iron Mask.
The Drink of Milk, watercolor 1882
A very prominent illustrator, Maurice Leloir was elected President of the French Watercolor Society.
He illustrated works by J.J. Rousseau, J.B. Moliere, H. de Balzac among others.
He also designed theater posters.
A ride in the Country, watercolor
In 1906, Maurice Leloir wrote and illustrated a book "the Dictionary of Costume".
In 1928, at the invitation of Douglas Fairbanks, Leloir worked in the US as an art advisor on the film The Man in the Iron Mask.
Two Elegant Figures in a Row Boat, oil
Labels:
19th century,
20th century,
French artists,
illustration,
watercolor
Saturday
Charles Dana Gibson (1867-1944) and the Gibson Girl

In her book America's Great Illustrators, Susan E. Meyer described the Gibson Girl the best way:
"She was taller than the other women currently seen in the pages of magazines.. infinitely more spirited and independent, yet altogether feminine. She appeared in a stiff shirtwaist, her soft hair piled into a chignon, topped by a big plumed hat. Her flowing skirt was hiked up in back with just a hint of a bustle. She was poised and patrician. Though always well bred, there often lurked a flash of mischief in her eyes."

Charles Gibson was born into a wealthy New England family. Recognizing his artistic talent his parents enrolled him in the Art Students League. At the age of 18 Charles started his career with a new magazine then Life.
Gibson'd audience enjoyed the manner in which he poked fun at high society characters. His monthly salary started at $33, the third month he was paid already $185. Tid-Bits, which was later re-named Time magazine, also bought his illustrations. Later Gibson waorked also for Scribner’s Magazine, Century, and Harper’s Magazine.
He started drawing ‘The Gibson Girl’ in 1890. His wife, Irene Langhorne Gibson, was the model for ‘The Gibson Girl’- she was an ideal image of youthful American femininity, the modern woman, athletic, smart, stylish, and desirable and she sold magazines.
Condé Nast agreed to a sharing relationship with Life, for a contract for $100,000 for 100 illustrations over a four-year period. At the height of his career, his salary had reached $75,000 per year.
By 1920 Gibson had the controlling shares of Life magazine, although he sold it in 1932. Gibson suffered a heart attack on his island off the coast of Maine, by the request of president Franklin D. Roosevelt, Gibson was flown via Navy seaplane to New York, where he died a few weeks later.






Labels:
20th century,
American artists,
drawing,
graphics,
illustration
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