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Grapefruit Moon Gallery

Original Art from the Grand Age of American Illustration

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Golden Age

A rare and whimsically delightful surviving cover painting from the golden age of illustration by Theodore Haupt, which appeared on the cover of The New Yorker; January 28, 1928. This painting captures the fun and folly of New York City in a severe art deco zig-zag aesthetic. During the busy wintertime wonderland shopping crush, a window dresser is shown feverishly attiring a nude store mannequin as snow covered throngs watch in delight. Haupt illustrated forty four covers for The New Yorker between 1927 and 1933.

Window Dressing

Artist: Theodore Haupt

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1920s, art deco, Golden Age, jazz age, magazine cover, new york city, New Yorker, New Yorker Magazine, original cover art, Theodore Haupt
Added to Gallery: July 8, 2011

An important early cover painting by Jerome Rozen for the June 7, 1927 long running twice monthly adventure pulp title “Popular Stories.” This painting combines Westward Ho, covered wagon western Americana imagery with civil war drama, in a vaguely historical scene with intensely powerful imagery. The depiction, in the strong color blocks for which the pulps were famed, features a confederate soldier menacing an elderly African America slave and sympathetic young damsel who are attempting to flee unspoken horrors through the desolate prairie.

A Covered Wagon Confrontation

Artist: Jerome Rozen

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1920s, american, civil war, Golden Age, Jerome Rozen, magazine cover, original cover art, Popular Stories, pulp, Street & Smith, The Shadow, western, western americana
Added to Gallery: July 8, 2011

A rare surviving luminous pastel portrait of early talkie era legendary Hollywood film star Katherine Hepburn, created as the cover for the September 1933 issue of Screenland Magazine. An excellent example of cover portraiture by Charles Gates Sheldon who had a very prolific career creating stylized glamorous art deco Hollywood film star portraits for many of the leading jazz age movie magazine titles. Pastel is beautifully framed and silk matted behind glass.

Katharine Hepburn

Artist: Charles Sheldon

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1930s, american, art deco, Charles Martignette, Charles Sheldon, glamour, Golden Age, hollywood, jazz age, Katharine Hepburn, magazine cover, original cover art, portrait, Screenland
Added to Gallery: July 8, 2011

A macabre and dark highly inventive large format gouache illustration painting by Harrison Fisher used as a full color book plate in the 1907 edition of “A Dream of Fair Women” by Lord Alfred Tennyson. In this scene our maiden fair has just completed lent and prepares to give the devil his due and go out ballroom dancing in revealing for the day, corseted attire. This is a classic Harrison Fisher painting and a wonderful and historically impactful example of late Victorian period imagery where traditional customs are seen colliding with a less restrained, more promiscuous Edwardian vision of femininity.

Thoughts of Pascal

Artist: Harrison Fisher

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1900s, american, christian, devil, Edwardian, Golden Age, Harrison Fisher, Lord Alfred Tennyson, macabre, maiden, new york city, original interior illustration, pin up, victorian
Added to Gallery: June 28, 2011

A deftly rendered luminous pastel portrait of silent and early talkie legendary Hollywood film star Greta Garbo, created as the cover for the June 1934 issue of Screenland Magazine. One of the finest examples of cover portraiture we have ever come across by Charles Gates Sheldon who had a very prolific career creating stylized glamorous art deco Hollywood film star portraits for many of the leading jazz age movie magazine titles.

Greta Garbo

Artist: Charles Sheldon

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1930s, american, art deco, Charles Martignette, Charles Sheldon, glamour, Golden Age, Greta Garbo, hollywood, magazine cover, original cover art, portrait, Screenland, silent movie, swedish, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: June 21, 2011

An inventive and forward thinking “progress through industry” original gouache illustration painting by Theodore Haupt. This was commissioned by The New Yorker magazine and used as their May 2, 1931 cover. The imagery attempts to put a positive spin on the Great Depression using modernism, industry and the technological advances of the Machine Age as rallying points in this bustling New York City cityscape. Haupt illustrated forty four covers for The New Yorker between 1927 and 1933.

Industry

Artist: Theodore Haupt

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1930s, american, art deco, Golden Age, industrial age, machine age, magazine cover, new york city, New Yorker, original cover art, Theodore Haupt
Added to Gallery: June 21, 2011

The Light of New York by Walter Dean Goldbeck was created as a full page color advertisement that ran in The Saturday Evening Post for General Electric. The inspired and almost transcendentally captivating image would later become a Judge Magazine cover (August 1, 1914) under the title “The Spirit of New York”. The image, which features a mischievous goddess sprinkling moonlight down onto the city below also captured the imagination of music publishers Fred Fischer, who used it as a sheet music cover for his composition “I Found a Rose in the Devil’s Garden.”

The Light of New York

Artist: Walter Dean Goldbeck

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1910s, advertising, american, art nouveau, Charles Martignette, General Electric, Golden Age, Judge, maiden, moon, new york city, The Golden Gallery, Walter Dean Goldbeck
Added to Gallery: May 25, 2011

A spectacular surviving pulp cover painting by Norman Saunders for the Popular Publications August 1952 issue of New Detective Magazine, Volume #18 Issue #1. Saunders masterfully employs an extreme perspective and palette to give the scene an intense sense of danger, tension and drama. During the 1950s heyday of pulp magazines, literally hundreds of titles would be competing for customers any given month and publishers used Saunders dramatic, erotic, and intense covers to give their magazines the edge they needed to attract potential buyers at the newsstand.

New Detective Aerial Crime Scene

Artist: Norman Saunders

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1950s, american, crime, damsel in distress, Golden Age, lurid, magazine cover, New Detective Magazine, Norman Saunders, original cover art, pin up, pulp, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: February 12, 2011

This is an early and large oil on canvas by Norman Saunders created as cover art for Dell publications, but never used. An electrifying, spicy pulp era entanglement with all the essential pulp elements of peril, danger, terror with erotic excitement. A damsel in distress is held in bondage as assorted toughs and thugs have it out amongst themselves guns-a-blaze in this art deco scene. Set against the backdrop of a machine-age steamroom, filled with modernist and industrial gadgets, this both speaks to the peril of gangsterism in the Great Depression 30s and the dark side of progress.

Shootout Along The Steampipes

Artist: Norman Saunders

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1930s, Charles Martignette, damsel in distress, Golden Age, Norman Saunders, pulp
Added to Gallery: February 12, 2011

A rare surviving cover painting by JW Scott, created for a yet unidentified Western pulp publication. A gritty old west scene of a group of cowboys reloading and preparing to fire above a rugged desert pass. The artist created this utilizing an impasto technique that brings a tension and urgent intensity to the Americana Western genre classic. Illustration Magazine recently devoted a large portion of issue #14 on the life and works of John Walter Scott, who worked during the 1930s creating numerous and stylistically diverse pulp covers, the verso canvas notes this was a cover for a “Sept 8 Western,” possibly referring to the “Complete Western Book” or “Wild Western Novels” both of which commissioned covers by Scott.

The Calico Kid

Artist: J. W. Scott

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1930s, american, Golden Age, J. W. Scott, magazine cover, original cover art, pulp, western, western americana
Added to Gallery: February 9, 2011

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