In September 1955, on assignment in from Life magazine, McMahon was present at the trial of the killers of Emmett Till, a black 14-year-old boy from Chicago who was brutally murdered for flirting with a white woman; the young wife of a grocery store owner.
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McMahon captured an important moment - many say a turning point - in civil rights history. When Till's uncle, Moses Wright, stood and pointed out the two murderers, it was the first time in the history of the state of Mississipi that a black man implicated the guilt of a white man in court.
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During his storied career, McMahon recorded the likeness of many important historical figures...
(Martin Luther King Jr.)
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(Pope Paul VI)
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... and the range of subjects he documented and the assignments he undertook is truly unprecedented. Here's a drawing of St. Peter's Basilica that was printed in the Saturday Evening Post and the Chicago Tribune...
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... and here's one from a series done on board the U.S.S. Wasp during the recovery of the Gemini IV space capsule.
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By their very nature, readers would find these subjects compelling, but even McMahon's illustrations of ordinary people living everyday lives provide the viewer with something remarkable: the sensitivity of his observational drawings brings artistry to even the most mundane activities.
Here is an illustration by McMahon for a 1960s McDonald's Corporation annual report...
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Three double page spreads on newspaper production from the 1964 edition of "Childcraft: The How and Why Library"...
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A painting for an article in Chicago Magazine, "Housing, Fair and Otherwise," 1960s...
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One of approximately fifty drawings for an IBM film produced by Charles Eames...
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And here's one of my favourite Franklin McMahon illustrations among all those I've seen while researching the artist, done for an Abbott Laboratories publication called "What's New."
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McMahon once said, "I tell students: Look at the people you see on the way to school. Draw them. Look at the people in a bus station, waiting for a train. Draw them. Go to the airline terminal. Go to the courtroom, factory, municipal government. It doesn't have to be reportage in the sense of an incident. Draw what you see."
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