The Golden Age of Magazine Illustration


Book Description

This lavishly-produced volume brings together some of the most outstanding and outrageous illustrations ever created. The 1960s and 70s were years of revolt and utopian dreams, of struggle, hope and disillusion, of unexpected and unpredictable events. A new generation of illustrators arrived on the scenes in New York and Paris, London and Los Angeles, Warsaw, Tokyo, Berlin and Milan, and magazines like the New Yorker, Esquire, Lui, Playboy, Ramparts, Evergreen, Nova, Twen, New York Magazine, Elle and Life called on the best of them for pictorial commentary, humor and enlightenment. With great design and an insightful text, this book is an unparalleled celebration of the art of illustration at its most powerful. Among others, it includes work by Seymour Chwast, Roman Cieslewicz, Paul Davis, Andrzej Dudzinski, Jean-Michel Folon, Andre Francois, Shigeo Fukuda, Milton Glaser, Jean Lagarrigue, Alain Le Saux, Pierre Le-Tan, Gabriel Pascalini, Guy Peellaert, Michel Quarez, Roland Topor, Tomi Ungerer, Miriam Wosk, Tadanori Yokoo.




101 Great Illustrators from the Golden Age, 1890-1925


Book Description

The most comprehensive book of its kind, this gorgeous edition presents more than 500 full-color works by famous and lesser-known artists from the heyday of book and magazine illustration. Featured artists include Walter Crane, Edmund Dulac, Maxfield Parrish, Howard Pyle, Arthur Rackham, N. C. Wyeth, and many others — 101 in all. Several examples of each artist's finest illustrations are accompanied by biographical comments and career notes. Additional artists include Victorian-era illustrator Aubrey Beardsley, noted for his compelling combinations of the erotic and grotesque; American painter Harvey Dunn, one of Howard Pyle's most accomplished students; James Montgomery Flagg, famed for his U.S. Army recruitment posters; Charles Dana Gibson, creator of the iconic Gibson Girl; Charles R. Knight, a pioneer in the depiction of dinosaurs and other prehistoric creatures; Edward Penfield, the king of poster art; Frederic Remington, whose works document the Old West; J. Allen St. John, the principal illustrator of Edgar Rice Burroughs's adventure tales; and dozens of others.




Women Illustrators of the Golden Age


Book Description

Unique anthology presents scores of color and black-and-white artworks by 22 of the best women illustrators of the early 20th century, including Beatrix Potter, Kate Greenaway, and Jessie Willcox Smith.







Golden Age Illustrations of W. Heath Robinson


Book Description

The first full-scale treatment of Robinson's early output, this anthology features more than 100 images from fairy tales, children's literature, and works by Shakespeare, Kipling, and Poe, many in full glorious color.




The Golden Age of Botanical Art


Book Description

The seventeenth century heralded a golden age of exploration, as intrepid travelers sailed around the world to gain firsthand knowledge of previously unknown continents. These explorers also collected the world’s most beautiful flora, and often their findings were recorded for posterity by talented professional artists. The Golden Age of Botanical Art tells the story of these exciting plant-hunting journeys and marries it with full-color reproductions of the stunning artwork they produced. Covering work through the nineteenth century, this lavishly illustrated book offers readers a look at 250 rare or unpublished images by some of the world’s most important botanical artists. Truly global in its scope, The Golden Age of Botanical Art features work by artists from Europe, China, and India, recording plants from places as disparate as Africa and South America. Martyn Rix has compiled the stories and art not only of well-known figures—such as Leonardo da Vinci and the artists of Empress Josephine Bonaparte—but also of those adventurous botanists and painters whose names and work have been forgotten. A celebration of both extraordinarily beautiful plant life and the globe-trotting men and women who found and recorded it, The Golden Age of Botanical Art will enchant gardeners and art lovers alike.




Willard Mullin's Golden Age of Baseball Drawings 1934–1972


Book Description

In Fantagraphics’ ceaseless effort to rediscover every world-class cartoonist in the history of the medium, we turn your attention to a neglected part of the art form—sports cartooning—and to its greatest practitioner—Willard Mullin. The years 1930-1970 were the Golden Age of both American sports and American comic strips, when giants strode their respective fields—Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig, and Hank Aaron in one, George (Krazy Kat) Herriman, Milton (Steve Canyon) Caniff, Walt (Pogo) Kelly in the other—and Mullin was there, straddling both fields, recording every major player and event in the mid-20th-century history of baseball. Mullin was to baseball players what Bill Mauldin was to soldiers: advocate and critic, investing them with personality, humanity, dignity, and poignancy; Mauldin had Willie & Joe and Mullin had the Brooklyn Bum, his affectionate 1939 character representing the bedraggled figure of the Brooklyn Dodgers. Willard Mullin’s Golden Age of Baseball: Drawings 1934-1972 collects for the first time Mullin’s best drawings devoted to baseball—depictions of players like Joe DiMaggio, Ted Williams, Yogi Berra, and Sandy Koufax, legendary managers like Casey Stengel and George Steinbrenner, and events like Lou Gehrig’s emotional retirement speech on July 4, 1939, for which Mullin not only drew a portrait but composed a poem (which he often incorporated into his cartoons). Mullin’s fluid line and delicate but vigorous brushwork are shown to beautiful effect, with many drawings reproduced from original art. See why millions of baseball fans from the ’30s to the ’70s looked forward to Mullin’s cartoons in their daily paper.




Color the Exotic American Beauties from Art Deco Magazine Covers, the Golden Age of Hollywood Glamour


Book Description

Relax and enjoy The coloring book features Wladyslaw T. Benda's illustrations of exotic and mysterious girls that graced the covers of famous American art deco magazines, such as Life, Hearst's International, Theatre Magazine, Ladies' Home Journal, Cosmopolitan, etc. In the 1920s every magazine sought the look of the American Beauty that W. T. Benda (born in Poznan, Poland 1873 - died in New York City 1948) was famous for. Features: 38 light grayscale pictures all full-page images are single sided medium weight acid-free paper suitable for colored pencils, markers, chalk pastels, gel pens, aquarellable pencils, markers etc. all images are perfectly centered and fit exquisitely into a frame: 8"x10" all images are easy to remove by cutting along the line indicated on the page GREAT FUN & ENJOYMENT for all skill levels printed in USA with love Benda gained fame as a leading artist in the golden age of American illustration during the golden age of Hollywood glamour. He specialized in girl's and woman's portraits with exotic sensual features. He also became an acclaimed designer of theatrical costumes and masks. Benda's fame as a world-class mask creator even took him to Hollywood. In 1932 the artist created the original mask design for the Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's adventure movie "The Mask of Fu Manchu".




Men in Style


Book Description

A review of men's fashions from the thirties, forties, and post war period.




The Golden Age


Book Description

Continuing where THE GOLDEN AGE - VOL. TWO leaves off, this third volume in the series continues to celebrate the Golden Age of Illustration, lavishly presenting the work of 204 artists with 217 full page reproductions of original paintings, some of the finest images produced during the period, all photographed directly from the original art. Not a text book or a history book, this new volume is a stunning PICTURE book, filled to the brim with eye-popping visuals. 224 pages, hardcover with dust jacket.