Sunday, April 9, 2023

DA23003 Poster Art - American

One genre of visual arts that always appeals to me is Poster Art. In the United Kingdom I particularly like Railway Poster Art whilst in America all types of poster art appeals to me in particular the way they advertise their seaside destinations. This blog post will look at American Poster Art whilst a later post will look at UK Railway Poster Art. Let us look at some of the history of American Poster Art.

Please note the Copyright of the narrative “American Poster Art History” below belongs to :-

ENCYCLOPEDIA OF ART 
© visual-arts-cork.com. All rights reserved. 

American Poster Art History

The 20th Century would be dominated by American commercial illustration, not least because of its powerful publishing and printing industry. The introduction of four-colour letterpress printing technology made possible the faithful reproduction of a full colour painting. Henceforth illustrators could have their drawings and paintings reproduced exactly as created. Soon, publications like Harper's Weekly, McClure's, Scribner's, and The Century began to attract America's best painters as freelance illustrators. New publications appeared, including the Saturday Evening Post, Collier's Weekly, American Magazine, McCall's, Peterson's, Woman's Home Companion, Metropolitan, Outing, The Delineator, All-Story Magazine, Vogue and others, leading to a huge increase in opportunities for illustrative artists, although this did not prevent the use of labour-saving devices like cameras, Balopticans and pantographs. Young talented illustrators at this time included Stanley Arthurs, Harvey Dunn, Edward Hopper, Frank Schoonover and N.C. Wyeth, along with outstanding women-artists like Elizabeth Shippen Green, Violet Oakley, Jessie Willcox Smith, Sarah S. Stillwell and Ellen Thompson. 

World War I led to increased demand for posters and billboards, as well as pictures of the fighting. Eight leading illustrators, including W. J. Aylward, Walter Jack Duncan, Harvey Dunn, Wallace Morgan, Ernest Peixotto, and Harry Townsend, were sent to the Western Front to produce paintings and drawings (now in the Smithsonian Institute) to inform the public and also stimulate more support for the war effort. See also James Montgomery Flagg's famous 1917 army recruiting poster depicting Uncle Sam pointing directly at the viewer. (Famous American World War II propaganda posters include Rosie the Riveterby Norman Rockwell.) 

The 1920s post war boom in America led to even greater demand for commercial images, advertising graphics, and literary pictures to accompany magazine serializations of novels by the likes of F.Scott Fitzgerald, and Ernest Hemingway. Literary illustrators such as Walter Biggs, Charles Chambers, Dean Cornwell, James Montgomery Flagg, became celebrities in the process. Meanwhile Norman Rockwell (1894-1978), whose niche was the cover of the Saturday Evening Post, was fast becoming a household name in American art, with his nostalgic, sentimental pictures of a bygone era. In the 1920s new periodicals emerged, including The New Yorker, Vanity Fair, Smart Set and College Humor, all of which recruited new artists to illustrate their contents. 

In contrast, the 1930s was a bleak era of depression and recession. Many illustrators were laid off and publications closed (two exceptions being Fortune magazine, launched in 1930, and Esquire magazine, launched 1933), while photography began to replace hand-drawn imagery. The only bright spot was the increased demand for paintings and drawings to illustrate pulp novels, a genre which attracted newcomer illustrators like Walter Baumhofer, Emery Clarke, John Clymer, John Falter, Robert G. Harris, Tom Lovell, and Amos Sewell, as well as established illustrators like Robert Graef, John Newton Howitt, George Rozen, and Herbert Morton Stoops. 

The 1940s offered new illustrative possibilities. During the war, these included advertising imagery for military products, and magazine illustrations aimed at home front wives and girlfriends of servicemen on active duty overseas. After the war, there was a surge in demand for advertising graphics, point of sale imagery, and magazine illustrations. The post war baby boom also led to increased demand for illustrated books for children. Leading American illustrators of the time included John Gannam, John Falter, Robert Fawcett and Haddon Sundblom. 

The 1950s proved to be a pivotal decade for American illustrators. It began well, with strong demand across the board, notably in advertising and marketing. Unfortunately, the advent of television led to a major decline in magazine advertising, and a consequent reduction in illustrated pages. More photography was employed to introduce greater realism in publishing, and this too led to a drop in demand for illustrative works. Brighter colours and bolder themes failed to arrest the decline, as many magazines went bankrupt. As it was, the 1960s witnessed a mini-resurgence of the medium, with a new demand for music album covers, music posters, and comic book art. (The music poster movement expanded into marketing and merchandizing with free album-posters, as well as promotional concert posters. Demand for this type of fine art echoed the earlier demand for vintage posters during the late 19th century.) In addition, the growing popularity of paperback novels (Penguin Books, Pocket Books, Bantam Books) created a fierce market for attractive front-cover art. Practitioners of this precise form of poster-like literary illustration included James Avati, James Bama, and Stanley Meltzoff. The late 1950s also saw the emergence of famous artists like Andy Warhol (1928-87), and Roy Lichtenstein (1923-97), who cut their teeth on commercial graphic design - including cartoon imagery and screen-printing techniques - before becoming major figures in the 1960s Pop art market. Warhol for instance studied painting and design at the Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh (1945-49), before producing illustrations for shoe advertisements, album cover designs, and also literay illustrations for Truman Capote's writings. For more, see Andy Warhol's Pop Art of the sixties and seventies. 

During the 1970s and 1980s, the US commercial art market fragmented into a large number of more specialized segments, including: animation and movies, video games, music, book illustration, fashion drawing, "Sword and Sorcery" paperback books, newspaper comic strips, political cartoons and others. It was the last decade in which illustration remained largely unaffected by the Computer Revolution. 

By contrast, illustration in the 1990s was changed for ever by the universal adoption of computer systems and computerised methods of image-creation, editing, replication and communication. The art of illustration became the technique of image processing, as more and more commercial artists produced professional pictures without any traditional art training, or without any ability in drawing. More and more professional illustrators were replaced by novices proficient in graphics software programs like Adobe Illustrator, Photoshop, and CorelDRAW, as well as Wacom tablets and Kai's Power Tools. At the same time, however, this type of digital art has been combined with more traditional methods. Fusion illustration, for instance, is a mixed form of fine art and commercial art involving illustration, graphic design, typography, and photography. Moreover, the widespread popularity of the science-fiction and fantasy genres (books, games, posters, products) has created an entirely new genre requiring both fine art and digital skills. 

 

Types & Styles of Illustration 

Here is a short list of selected styles of illustrative art, featuring some of the main types of magazine, book and post illustrations of the 20th century. Listed thematically, rather than chronologically, it is not intended to be exhaustive, and for reasons of space, certain categories (eg. comics and music imagery) have been left out altogether. 

Children's Illustrations 
 
Beatrix Potter 
The Tale of Peter Rabbit (1902)  
The Tale of Squirrel Nutkin (1903)  
The Tale of Two Bad Mice (1904)  
The Tale of Mrs. Tiggy-Winkle (1905)  
The Tale of Mr. Jeremy Fisher (1906)  
The Tale of Jemima Puddle-Duck (1908) 
Arthur Rackham 
Fairy Tales of the Brothers Grimm (1900) 
Peter Pan in Kensington Gardens (1906)  
Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1907) 
The Welsh Giant, The Allies Fairy Book (1916) 
Edmund Dulac 
I've hardly closed my eyes all night, Hans Christian Andersen Fables (1912) 
Barry Moser 
Brer Fox & Brer Coon - Jump Again! More Adventures of Brer Rabbit (1987) 
 
Arts and Crafts 
 
Aubrey Beardsley 
The Stomach Dance from Salome (1907) 
John Austen 
Illustration from Byron's Don Juan (1926) 
 
Art Nouveau 
 
Jules Cheret 
Advertisement for La Loie Fuller (1893) 
Felix Vallotton 
Le Bain (1894) 
Theophile Steinien 
Advertisememt for the Cabaret du Chat Noir (1896) 
Alfonse Mucha 
Advertisement for Waverly Cycles (1898) 
Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec 
Yvette Guilbert 
 
Object Poster 
 
Lucien Bernhard 
Advertisement for Manoli Cigarettes (1910) 
Max Oppenheimer 
Exhibition poster for Moderne Galerie (1911) 
Robert Hardmeyer 
Advertisement for Waschanstalt Zurich AG (1915) 
 
Expressionism 
 
Thomas Theodor Heine 
Cover Illustration for Simplicissimus (1897) 
Alfred Kubin 
The Ghost at the Ball, The Dance of Death (1918) 
Kathe Kollwitz 
Die Lebenden dem Toten (1919) 
Richard Janthur 
Illustration for Robinson Crusoe (1922) 
Feliks Topolski 
Nuremberg Trial, Topolski's Chronicle (1946) 
Antoinio Frasconi 
The Fox & the Grapes (La Fontaine's Fabels) 1950 
 
Art Deco 
 
Fortunato Depero 
Cover Illustration for Vanity Fair (July 1930) 
A.M. Cassandre 
Advertisement for Au Bucheron Furniture Store (1927) 
Rockwell Kent 
Memoirs of Jacques Casanova (1928) 
Marcello Dudovich 
Advertisement for Borsalino (1930) 
Jean Carlu 
Cover Illustration for Vanity Fair (July 1931) 
 
Romanticism 
 
Maxfield Parrish 
Stars (1926) 
Franklin Booth 
Advertisement for Butterick Publishers (1926) 
Herbert Paus 
Cover Illustration for Popular Science (1929) 
 
Surrealism 
 
Rene Magritte 
La Reproduction Interdite (1937) 
Herbert Bayer 
Life Hangs on a String (1937) 
 
Realism 
 
J.C. Leyendecker 
Cover Illustration for Collier's Magazine (June 24, 1916) 
Norman Rockwell 
Time to Retire (1924) 
Advertisement for Interwoven Socks (1929) 
After the Prom (1957) 
Howard Pyle 
Howard Pyle's Book of Pirates (1925) 
Al Parker 
Cover Illustration for Journal (July 1945) 
Roy Carnon  
Advertisement for Reed Paper Group (1953) 
Malcolm T. Liepke 
Brochure for Bender Fabrics (1984) 
 
Gothic 
 
Theodor Kittelsen 
The Dying Mountain Troll, Simplicissimus Vol.II No.31 (1887) 
Heinrich Kley 
Betriebsftvrung, Sammelalbum (1938) 
Brad Holland 
Illustration for Confessions of a Short-Artist, Personlich (1997) 
 
Psychedelic 
 
C.H. Johansen 
Poster for Visions (1967) 
Victor Moscoso 
Poster for Big Brother & the Holding Co (1967) 
Alan Aldridge 
Illustration for Aldridge's Interview with The Beatles and Sgt Pepper (1967) 
Ganesh, Print for House of Blues' Ganesh Festival (1995) 
 
Neo Expressionism 
 
Andre Francois 
Illustration for Punch (1960) 
Ralph Steadman 
Illustration for the New York Times Op-Ed (1962) 
Tomi Ungerer 
Black Power/White Power (1967) 
Jay Beildt 
Amerika is Devouring its Children (1970) (after Goya) 
Robert Osborn 
War (1985) 
Bascove 
Tales of Apartheid, The Progressive (1985) 
Heinz Edelman 
Trained Sausage, Seville Catalog (1989) 
Marshall Arisman  
Silence of the Lambs (1990) 
Edward Sorel 
Crush Hour, Cover Illustration for The New Yorker (Jan 31, 1994) 
 
Neo Realism 
 
David Mccaulay 
Illustration from Cathedral: The Story of Its Construction (1973) 
Paul Davis 
Three Penny Opera, Poster for the New York Public Theater (1976) 
Anita Kunz 
Linda Rondstadt, Rolling Stone Magazine (1981) 
Julian Allen 
Freud, The New York Times Book Review (1998) 
 
Neo Surrealism 
 
Roland Topor 
Illustration from Toxology (1970) 
Dean Rohrer 
Monica Lisa, Cover Illustration for The New Yorker (Feb 8, 1999) 
Edward Lam 
Clintonmania, The New York Times Book Review (1999)  
Guy Billout 
Canyon, The Atlantic Monthly (January 2000) 
Istvan Banyai 
Election Debates Are Missing the Purpose.... George Magazine (2002) 
Viktor Koen 
Reinventing Physics, The New York Times Book Review (June 2005) 
 
Punk 
 
Bruce Carleton 
Mutant Monster Beach Party - Cover Illustration for Punk (1978) 
Scott Neary 
Illustration for Rolling Stone (1980) 
 
Postmodernist Illustrations 
 
Ron Lieberman 
Album Cover for Cathy Chamberlain's Rag n Roll Review (1977) 
Paul Reott 
Blind Date, The Blue Book (1983) 
John Flaming, Steven Guarnaccia 
Advertisement for the Dallas Society of Visual Communicatons (1990) 
Henrik Drescher 
Rakasa, The Gruesome Guide to World Monsters (2005) 
 
Digital Illustration 
 
Cyan 
Poster for the 15th Anniversary of Friends of Good Music, Berlin (1998) 
eBoy 
Temperature Building, The New York Times Magazine (2005) 
Henning Wagengreth 
Istanbul (2006) 
 
Caricatures 
 
Jean Mulatier 
Leonid Brezhnev, Cover Illustration for Stern Magazine (1972) 
David Levine 
Liza Minelli (1972) 
Gerald Scarfe 
The Queen, Scarfeland (1989) 
Robert Risko 
J. Edgar Hoover, Vanity Fair (1992) 
Philip Burke 
Dick Cheney, Vanity Fair (1995). 

 

Note: To use the above table contents effectively “copy and paste” the Artist Name and the Painting Description directly into Google search and it will bring up the details available on the internet. This will normally include the images and supporting narrative.

End of narrative by © visual-arts-cork.com. All rights reserved.

 

 

David Bannister Postscript

As you can appreciate from the above narrative on American Posters this is a huge subject with the many sub-genre within the poster movement. What you like will be your personal preference. With Google you will be able to further research your own preferences remembering to use Google Images to locate posters.

Below I have listed some of the resources I like to use to look at and purchase poster prints.

Fine Art America is the world’s largest art marketplace and print-on-demand technology company founded in 2006. You will not find all artists on their site since artists may not have licensed the reproduction of their work to them. For example you will not find anything by Edward Hopper. But impressively over one hundred and fifty Norman Rockwell painting are displayed and copies can be purchased.

http://www.fineartamerica.com

I have to admit this is a personal choice of mine with these not vintage posters but recently painted ones that capture the atmosphere of American beach towns. It brings back for me my holidays in America.

http://www.beachtownposters.com

This is a really unusual site that sells original metal signs. It is a site offering everything and it is super to browse through the range on offer. Smaller signs can be purchased that are very low priced.

http://www.originalmetalsigns.co.uk 

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