I previously posted a series of life drawings by illustrator Daniel Schwartz. In addition to pencil drawings, Schwartz regularly painted from the model with watercolors.
Tuesday, April 28, 2026
MORE FIGURE STUDIES FROM DANIEL SCHWARTZ
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
NEW EXHIBITION OF THE WORK OF CARTER GOODRICH
If you like good drawing and you're in the vicinity of New York City, it would be hard to do better than the Carter Goodrich retrospective at the Philippe Labaune Gallery. If you're not in the vicinity, the show is worth a trip.
The exhibition includes an excellent cross section of Goodrich's art, including His New Yorker covers, his magazine and book illustrations, and his character designs for major animated films. It's a rare opportunity to study his beautiful originals up close.
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| Note the vapor from the nostrils of the reindeer, the treatment of the boy's hair, the line of the tree. |
Even better from my perspective, it's a chance to view preliminary drawings and loose sketches which so often are the best way to see what an artist has.
Smart, funny, creative and beautifully crafted, Goodrich's New Yorker covers in this show remind us of a better era for the New Yorker, when its covers offered more charm, aesthetic grace and humanity.
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| A prescient baby new year for the new millennium, made all the more relevant in our year of AI |
The show also includes a number of proposals for New Yorker covers which, for some reason, were not accepted. If I were the art director of the New Yorker I'd show up at the gallery and see whether it's too late to retroactively accept proposals I'd rejected.
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| Taking the plunge |
I can't recommend this show highly enough.
The Labaune Gallery has become a gallery to watch for people with a serious interest in illustration. It has recently exhibited work by artists such as Peter de Seve, Mike Mignola, Moebius, Dave McKean and Frank Miller.
Owner Philippe Labaune has a somewhat unconventional background for the art world. He began his career in finance but had been a dedicated collector of narrative art for many years. His formative influences included Moebius and Hergé. He founded the gallery to fill what he perceived as a gap in American galleries presenting narrative art with seriousness and focus, emphasizing both its artistic significance and its narrative power. In the future, he says, the gallery wants to elevate the medium across borders.
Tuesday, April 14, 2026
ONE REASON I ADMIRED GARY KELLEY
Gary Kelley, illustrator extraordinaire, passed away yesterday. I had the pleasure of meeting Gary in my younger years, and later interviewed him for my column about him ("The Artist Who Paints Music" in The Saturday Evening Post).
Gary was a remarkable talent, and was recognized by his peers as such. Artist Greg Manchess said, "My own career was set afire by his influence and guidance. He is a North Star in my life as an artist." Gary was awarded 28 gold and silver medals from the Society of Illustrators and was elected to the Society's Hall of Fame in 2007. There are tributes popping up from many people who knew him better and are better qualified to speak than I. But I wanted to share one reason (among many) why I admired him.
Gary understood when to hang on and when to keep moving. When other illustrators were relocating for their work, moving to urban areas where artists and clients congregate and dressing differently, Gary resolved to remain in small town Iowa here he enjoyed the quality of life. He believed that he could build a thriving career living where he wanted, and he was right.
The cool thing was that living in Cedar Falls, Iowa (not far from Wild Horse Ridge in Black Hawk County) didn't constrain Gary's ability to come up with the most sophisticated, gritty noir illustrations of urban scenes or allegorical pictures of the cosmos.
He was not just painting folksy pictures of the corner barber shop. His imagination was unbounded.
Gary stubbornly remained in Cedar Falls, yet when the traditional illustration field began changing, he was nimble about pulling up stakes and moving on. As illustrated magazines began drying up, Kelley created huge murals and wrote and illustrated graphic novels and painted pictures that were projected above a symphony orchestra as they played classical music.
He was welcomed in all these venues because he was recognized everywhere as a picture maker to be taken seriously.
Gary Kelley, a man who knew how to separate the wheat from the chaff, will be sorely missed.
Monday, March 30, 2026
A VISUAL DIARY OF ILLUSTRATORS
I've previously written about my admiration for Alice and Martin Provensen, the husband and wife team responsible for some of the best illustrated children's books of the 20th century.
| Shipwrecked and battered, Odysseus encounters the princess Nausicaä and her handmaidens by the river (from The Iliad and the Odyssey) |
Wednesday, March 11, 2026
ART REVOLUTIONS ON THE STAIRS
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| James Avati (1959) |
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The example of the Baroness raises an important question for artists working in times, like now, of great social change: How do we remain meaningful by embracing the new, while at the same time not looking like a nitwit?
Thursday, February 26, 2026
VIVACIOUS WOMEN
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| To modern audiences this woman might seem like a psychopath who would slip rat poison in your butter pecan ice cream, but 1940s audiences loved this look. |
These pictures of vivacious women are just one among dozens of stylistic eccentricities that come and go in the historical clipping files of old illustrators. Why did people like this style? I can't explain it. That's a chore for future art historians.















































