Joyce Ballentyne
Much beloved among pin-up art afficionados...
... Joyce Ballentyne was also a busy Chicago advertising illustrator who can count among her achievements the creation of the Coppertone Girl and her mischievous pup.
* The whole story here
Marilyn Conover
Marilyn Conover knew Ballentyne socially, as her husband was one of Haddon Sundblom's many apprentices. That association inevitably lead to the Conovers socializing with Gil Elvgren, Joyce Ballentyne and other Chicago artists who had their roots in the "Sundblom Circle." After making her way to New York, Conover continued to find pleanty of work. She credited her rep, Joe Mendola, with her success.
But despite never wanting for work, Conover did not look back on her career fondly. In a phone interview she told me, "Just thinking about those days makes me physically ill." She found the relentless grind of meeting client deadlines very stressful and recalled unhappy occasions like the time she had to finish an ad job from her maternity bed.
Not even the accomplishment of illustrating the cover of Time magazine swayed Marilyn Conover. She told me that she deliberately took the train to Grand Central Station so she could walk around from news stand to news stand and see all those freshly printed copies with her art on the cover.
But when I asked her how it felt, she said, "It felt like nothing. I just got back on the train and went home."
Mary Mayo
Not all the top female illustrators of the '50s ended up at the Cooper Studio, as Sheilah Beckett, Lorraine Fox and Barbara Bradley did. Take for instance Mary Mayo. She was first repped by American Artists and then by Cooper rival, Fredman-Chaite studios.
Not much is known about Mayo, but there's no denying her drawing and painting chops. This story illustration below could, at a glance, be mistaken for something that might have been painted by Joe DeMers' brush.
Dorothy Monet
Another major New York art studio, Rahl Studios, boasted a roster of high profile illustrators that included Monet. From the mid-1940s to the mid-1950s, Monet's work was everywhere in story and advertising art. More than that, she is said to have had quite a vivacious personality. I was told by someone who knew her that Monet was "Gorgeous. And petite. Intelligent. Literate. Adventuresome. And quite the actress, innately.”
Monet could hold her own against the best in the business and moved easily between more sumptuously rendered traditional styles and the very modern flat, graphic techniques being pioneered by Al Parker.
Barbara Schwinn
"Barbara Schwinn Jordan was born in Glen Ridge, New Jersey in 1907. She studied at the Parsons School of Design, in Paris, at Grand Central Art School, Art Students League with Frank DuMond, Luigi Lucioni ad others, at Grand Chaumiere and Academy Julian in Paris, at Columbia University and the National Academy of Design."
"She was commissioned to paint the portraits of Queen Sirikit, Princess Margaret and Princess Grace, among others."
~ Biographical info from askart.com
Schwinn was also one of the most prolific female story illustrators of the mid-20th century. Represented by Lester Rossin Associates, Schwinn's work appeared in all the major magazines of the day on a very regular basis.
Wednesday, 8 February 2012
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