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Grapefruit Moon Gallery

Original Art from the Grand Age of American Illustration

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Grapefruit

    The Song Without Words is an original Orientalist genre painting by the American artist and illustrator Daniel Content which appeared as a full page color plate in the May 1937 issue of The Ladies Home Journal. Illustrating a story by famed early frontier woman Rose Wilder Lane, the image was published along side a caption […]

The Song Without Words

Artist: Daniel Content

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1930s, american, art deco, Daniel Content, Golden Age, Laura Ingalls Wilder, orientalist, original illustration art, original interior illustration, Saturday Evening Post
Added to Gallery: December 12, 2014

      Anton Otto Fischer is perhaps the Golden Age of Illustration artist most associated with maritime-genre paintings. This tense and dramatic shipwreck scene, created for the August 3, 1952 edition of The American Weekly Magazine, showcases his unique ability to show the grandeur and danger of the open water. Illustrating an interior story titled “Pulaski […]

Pulaski Sinking

Artist: Anton Otto Fischer

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: American Weekly, Anton Otto Fischer, Golden Age, Maritime, original illustration art, original interior illustration, Pulaski
Added to Gallery: December 11, 2014

  A costumed flapper girl, dressed to the nines in jazz-age fineries at a masquerade ball, is seductively caught in the light of a romantic full moon in this oil on canvas by J. Walter Wilkinson. The artist was a prominent and revered American illustrator, and we presume this to be a magazine cover for an […]

The Masquerade

Artist: J. Walter Wilkinson

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1920s, art deco, flapper, Golden Age, illustration, J. Walter Wilkinson, jazz age, magazine cover, original cover art, pin up
Added to Gallery: December 9, 2014

  An intensely colored, dramatic and moody, mixed media illustration work by Edwin Georgi, Date With Death, which illustrated an interior story by Leslie Ford in The Saturday Evening Post. The image shows a favorite Georgi theme, the moment of discovery of betrayal in a love triangle. A complete edition of the February 12, 1949 Saturday Evening […]

Date With Death

Artist: Edwin Georgi

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1940s, Edwin Georgi, macabre, noir, The Saturday Evening Post
Added to Gallery: December 2, 2014

    A deliriously sexy and erotically unhinged Alberto Vargas mixed media pin-up illustration for Playboy Magazine, this appeared on page 104 in the June, 1962 issue. A curvy and pretty new bride is seen in a moment of sudden clarity about to pack up for the divorce capital of the US in this spirited and brash […]

Niagara Falls

Artist: Alberto Vargas

Filed Under: Pin-Up & Glamour Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1960s, Alberto Vargas, erotic, nude, Playboy Magazine, The Golden Gallery, Varga Girl
Added to Gallery: December 1, 2014

    Wouldn’t You Like To Know… is a large sultry original published pin-up calendar painting by the prolific and important American artist Fritz Willis. Willis was the last true star pin-up artist of the old guard, when illustrative pin-up reigned supreme in men’s magazines and calendars. The artist worked during the very tail end of the […]

Wouldn’t You Like To Know…

Artist: Fritz Willis

Filed Under: Pin-Up & Glamour Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1960s, Brown & Bigelow, erotic, Fritz Willis, nude, opera gloves, original calendar art, pin up, risque, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: December 1, 2014

  It doesn’t get more action packed than this high drama scene of a gangster mol pin-up girl in a shoot out with an unseen mobster trying to push her out of a moving car in a seedy urban Chinatown. An original oil on board artwork by Wil Hulsey, this appeared as the cover of a 1956 issue of Guilty […]

Make Me A Widow

Artist: Wil Hulsey

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: Chinatown, Gang, Guilty Detective Story, magazine cover, original cover art, pulp, True Crime, Wil Hulsey
Added to Gallery: December 1, 2014

A boldly colored and tightly rendered likely preliminary pastel pin-up illustration by Earl Moran, showing an art deco sailor girl living the life aquatic. This dates to the late 1930s, as the outbreak of war in Europe caused both a premonition of America’s eventual involvement into what would become World War II, and a boost in industrial production (particularly shipbuilding) […]

Ahoy

Artist: Earl Moran

Filed Under: Pin-Up & Glamour Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1930s, art deco, Brown & Bigelow, Earl Moran, Great Depression, navy, pin up, risque, sailor
Added to Gallery: December 1, 2014

    A dramatic and suspenseful cover paperback painting by the prolific American Illustrator Harry Barton, where train tracks take on an ominous aura, and a deadly outcome appears likely. The cover of an early Ace Double Novel paperback titled Fear No More, written by Leslie Edgley. Illustration is nicely framed and matted behind glass and a […]

Fear No More

Artist: Harry Barton

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1940s, damsel in distress, Harry Barton, noir, original cover art, paperback, pulp
Added to Gallery: November 29, 2014

  An eerie underwater view of two Navy Frogman divers, this gouache cover painting by Ed Lafferty appeared on the cover of the August, 1951 edition of Popular Mechanics. The scene illustrates an interior story that showcases the groundbreaking movie set design work of Louis Witte, Hollywood’s “ace authority on celluloid warfare.”     Handsomely matted and […]

Navy Frog Men Scuba Scene

Artist: Ed Lafferty

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1950s, Ed Lafferty, magazine cover, navy, Popular Mechanics, scuba
Added to Gallery: November 29, 2014

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