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Grapefruit Moon Gallery

Original Art from the Grand Age of American Illustration

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The Golden Gallery

Featured within The Golden Gallery are works by influential artists such as Rolf Armstrong, Gil Elvgren and Earl Moran. These important paintings represent the pinnacle of illustration art , we trust you will enjoy this curated selection of genre-defining examples and unsurpassed rarities from the Grand Age of American Illustration.

A haunting and technically masterful painting on board by science fiction and pulp illustrator Hannes Bok, the first artist to win the prestigious Hugo Award. In 1954, Bok contributed this image for the back cover plate of Destiny – No.10, the early sci-fi fanzine published to coincide with the 12th World’s Science Fiction Convention in San Francisco. In that usage, the Tolkien-esque martian illustrates the the Richard E. Geis poem “Kill Me Earthmen.” This is titled on verso “Sentry” and is dated 1944 lower left.

The Sentry

Artist: Hannes Bok

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1940s, alien, american, Hannes Bok, magazine cover, Minnesota Artist, original cover art, pulp, science fiction, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: May 8, 2011

From the estate of legendary jazz-age Ziegfeld Follies photographer Alfred Cheney Johnston comes this sensational pastel by noted American illustrator Penrhyn Stanlaws. Inscribed “To Cheney from Penrhyn Stanlaws”, this is a fabulous offering it features a stylish 1920s flapper girl in a cloche hat admiring her abundant beauty in a compact mirror. This was created as the cover for the October 4, 1924 issue of Collier’s magazine, and later inscribed and gifted to Johnston.

A Stylish Fadeaway Girl

Artist: Penrhyn Stanlaws

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1920s, Alfred Cheney Johnston, american, art deco, Collier's, fadeaway girl, flapper, glamour, magazine cover, original cover art, Penrhyn Stanlaws, The Golden Gallery, vanity
Added to Gallery: May 6, 2011

This very rare illustration is possibly the only surviving pin-up girl, non-menace themed spicy pulp cover painting ever offered for sale by H.J. Ward. This was created for the spicy pulp title “Tattle Tales” and was published as either the March 1937 or June 1937 edition. Hugh J. Ward was a prolific pulp cover artist who has enjoyed much recent acclaim. At a recent 2010 auction, one of Ward’s damsel in distress cover paintings (August 1936 Spicy Mystery Stories) fetched $143,400.

The Tattle Tale

Artist: H. J. Ward

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1930s, american, art deco, H. J. Ward, pin up, pulp, Tattle Tales, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: April 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

A luminous and rare Golden Age of Illustration cover oil painting for the Saturday Evening Post, entitled “Graduate On Top Of the World”, by Edmund Davenport. This appeared as the cover the June 13, 1925 issue and is a fresh to the market work that finds the artist (who contributed three Post covers in 1925) painting in a Norman Rockwell like illustrative style. The unusual subject, that of a confident, young pretty, independent flapper on graduation day, and the scarcity of surviving Post covers from this era add to the already enormous appeal of this lovely and historic American illustration painting.

Graduate On Top Of The World

Artist: Edmund Davenport

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1920s, art deco, Curtis Publishing Company, Edmund Davenport, flapper, Golden Age, graduate, magazine cover, original cover art, The Golden Gallery, The Saturday Evening Post
Added to Gallery: February 8, 2011

An elementally beautiful nymph in the midst of metamorphosis rises from the churning sea in this mythic and beautiful 1907 oil on canvas by Paul Swan. This important early example from the artist, who was himself a social butterfly, features tremendous sophistication of technique, and combines the Art Nouveau style which was popular at the time with hints of the streamlined figural forms which would become synonymous with the art deco era.

Metamorphosis of Beauty

Artist: Paul Swan

Filed Under: Illustration & Advertising Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1910s, Alla Nazimova, american, Andy Warhol, art nouveau, fantasy, gay interest, glamour, nymph, Paul Swan, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: November 25, 2010

An original 1962 oil on canvas by Gilette Elvgren commissioned by the Brown & Bigelow Calendar Company and published under the titles “Just Right”,”Hat’s Nice” and “The Eyeds of March”. This sexy pin-up masterwork explores the silk stockings & garters scenario for which the artist is best known. A brunette Elvgren girl admires her wiles in an aptly named vanity mirror in this provocative over the shoulder derriere exposed creation. For those of you not keeping track, recent auctions have seen Elvgren’s pin-up works for Brown & Bigelow topping $200,000.00 on three recent occasions. The high water mark of $262,900.00 was seen at Heritage Auctions June 5th, 2008 sale in Dallas Texas (Lot #66097).

Just Right

Artist: Gil Elvgren

Filed Under: Pin-Up & Glamour Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1960s, american, Brown & Bigelow, Gil Elvgren, Great American Pin-up, lingerie, original calendar art, pin up, stockings, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: November 15, 2010

A bizarre and other-wordly rare surviving pulp cover painting by Harold W. McCauley for the October 1949 edition of “Amazing Stories”. A lurid and menacing, yet strangely beautiful illustration for the story “Tiger Women of Shadow Valley” by Berkeley Livingston. Story caption reads “There Was Death In Her Embrace”. This inspired work perfectly captures the luminous commercial technique and painterly elements of a successful Haddon Sundblom “Sundblom Shop” graduate and disciple in collision with pin-up girl, erotic science fiction pulp culture.

Tiger Woman of Shadow Valley

Artist: Harold McCauley

Filed Under: Pin-Up & Glamour Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1940s, Amazing Stories, american, Charles Martignette, erotic, Harold McCauley, lurid, menace, pin up, pulp, science fiction, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: November 12, 2010

A sensational, action packed, original oil painting by Allen Anderson. Commissioned as a cover for the pulp title Spicy Detective this work illustrates “The Corpse is Yours” by Robert A. Garron in the May 1941 issue. The artist created a number of these spicy covers for Culture Publications in the 1930s and 1940s. Anderson had some fun with this painting, presenting his signature on the canvas of the oil painting pictured within the scene, he also employs a very thick impasto technique on the paint colors that appears on the artist’s palette at the bottom of the field to appear as fresh paint used on the canvas being created within.

The Corpse Is Yours

Artist: Allen Anderson

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1940s, Allen Anderson, good girl art, lurid, menace, nude, pin up, pulp, Spicy Detective, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: November 10, 2010

A lurid, action filled, original pulp cover oil on canvas by Harry Lemon Parkhurst / H. L. Parkhurst, one of the premier artists creating spicy pulp imagery for Culture Publications during the 1930s – 40s. This work illustrates “It’s Your Funeral” by Robert A. Garron and was used as the cover for the June 1941 issue of Private Detective. Surviving pulp paintings for this title and by this artist are scarce and this painting has it all; action, danger, drama, menace and movement.

It’s Your Funeral

Artist: H. L. Parkhurst

Filed Under: Paperback & Pulp Art, Sorry, It's Sold
Tagged With: 1940s, american, circus, damsel in distress, H. L. Parkhurst, menace, nude, Private Detective, pulp, The Golden Gallery
Added to Gallery: November 9, 2010

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