So I had my Thanksgiving dinner after all!) (UPDATE : They had turkey–with cranberry sauce–at the work event. He drew the January and February 1918 covers for the NAACP magazine The Crisis,Īnd this one, which I featured as one of the best magazine covers of February 1918 and which has lived on as by far my most repinned Pinterest pin.īy the time of his death in 1978, Rockwell was one of America’s most beloved artists.Īnd last but definitely not least, thanks to all of you who, over the past two years, have turned a personal project into a community. His art appeared frequently on the cover of The Masses, which shut down in 1917 amid legal problems and was succeeded by The Liberator. Walts was born in Indiana (like a surprisingly large number of people I’ve come across in 1919***) in 1877. Luckily, the progressive press had another talented illustrator, Frank Walts. I couldn’t find a trace of him in 1919, though. Last year, my favorite leftist artist was Hugo Gellert, who did several cover illustrations for The Liberator. Fitzgerald notwithstanding, his life did have a second act: he designed the sets for the phenomenally successful 1937 Broadway revue Helzapoppin and served as an artist-in-residence at Harvard. Like a Fitzgerald character, he lived a riotous life, marrying four times, earning a fortune, losing most of it in the 1929 stock market crash, and suffering a nervous breakdown. Held would go on to do cover illustrations for F. Here are two of her covers for the magazine, Miss Conway is justly proud of the fact that she draws entirely by ear-never had a lesson in her life. She is one of the more temperamentally inclined of the younger artistic set she finds it absolutely impossible to get any real stuff into her sketches unless she is sitting in the midst of her pale lavender boudoir, and wearing a green brocaded robe de chambre lined with dull gold and having a single rose on the shoulder. Here’s how Vanity Fair described her in a contributors column in August 1919: She returned to the United States as World War II approached, moved to a family estate in Virginia, and died in 1956. Conway’s work ethic was legendary, but ill health forced her into early retirement in 1937. The marriage didn’t last long, but she stayed in London, living with her mother. She also designed costumes for film and the stage in New York and in Europe, where she moved in 1920 with her husband. Encouraged in her artistic aspirations by her globetrotting mother, she began her career with Condé Nast at the age of 20. Gordon Conway, who despite her name was a woman, was born in Texas in 1894, the daughter of wealthy parents.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |