Friday, February 10, 2012

Even More Female Illustrators You Should Know

Mary Nielsen Fleming

I still haven't managed to locate any biographical details about Margaret Nielsen Fleming. From what I've found of her work, I know that in the early '50s she did quite a few assignments for various women's magazines and worked in an appealing cartoony style.

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Throughout the '50s Nielsen Fleming seems to have consistently landed assignments - mostly for small magazine spot illustrations. Her style evolved a gradually to incorporate aspects of the then modern 'look' of commercial art.

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Was Nielsen Fleming a 'jobbing' illustrator? Perhaps. The only reference to her later career I could find was on amazon.com, where she is credited for creating three volumes of clip-art for the Dover company, this one below in 1994.

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Ginnie Hofmann

After graduating from Cincinnati Art Academy in 1942, Ginnie Hofmann moved to New York, where she contributed illustrations to many magazines during the 1950s. She counted Woman's Day, Good Housekeeping, Parent's Magazine and Mademoiselle among her clients.

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But by far, her best client was McCall's magazine, for which she drew the popular Betsy McCall paper doll feature from 1958 to 1986.

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You can find a huge selection of Ginnie Hofmann's Betsy McCall pages at this link. In 1995, Hofmann illustrated a special hardbound edition of The Joy of Cooking. More recently she was writing and illustrating children's books.


Jane Oliver

In a 1950s magazine article Jane Oliver described herself as a "regularly employed artist working in the commercial field."

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Despite that statement, there aren't many examples of her commercial work available (the piece below from Collier's is one of only two or three I've ever found.

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Oliver seems to have had a life-long passion for fine art watercolour painting, to which she brought a degree of abstraction similar to that found in her commercial art. Oliver was a member of the New Jersey Watercolor Society and won its Silver Medal of Honour Award in 1955.

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Mary Suzuki

She advised the young Andy Warhol to "draw shoes."

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During the 1950s, Suzuki was doing exactly that...

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... and drawing many distinctive, stylized fashion spreads for Harper's Bazaar, Seventeen and other women's magazines.

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Later in her career Mary Suzuki illustrated clothing patterns for Butterick and other pattern suppliers. She also designed clothes.


Miriam Troop

What great luck! Just this morning I discovered a youtube video from 2009 in which Miriam Troop gives a first-hand account of her early days as a young professional illustrator in New York City. A fascinating seven minutes with many examples of her work - enjoy!



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