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Dear Leif; this blog was just referred to me by our son, a videogame concept artist.
As a teenager, I saw my father, Nat White, painting most of the images you have of the Union Carbide paintings.
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He was a humble but renowned illustrator working for Caulkins & Holden ad company, and savored doing these paintings from beginning to end. He was looking hard for the right hands to illustrate.
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Then at "Hamburger Express" in Glen Cove, Long Island, I remember Dad whispering to Mom, "there they are, the hands!" Sure enough, a man sitting down the way had massive hands. He was a longshoreman in Brooklyn, and more than happy to come to Manhattan to have them photographed in a variety of poses.
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Many years later, Dad came into a personal relationship with Jesus Christ. In his mind and ours, the utter hubris of the Union Carbide ads became a perfect vehicle for scriptural truths appropriate to each illustration.
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Yet even before his New Birth, he painted these " a hand in things to come" with genuine awe.
Sincerely, Christine White Jorgensen, Florida
* Many thanks, Christine (and to your son) for clearing up the mystery of who was responsible for the Union Carbide ads. Nat White is another mid-century illustrator whose work I have long admired. Readers can see a small selection of his other ad artwork in my Nat White Flickr set.
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