Monday, July 9, 2012

Lewis Parker, Canadian Illustrator

I'm following up last week's series on Tom McNeely with a look at a few more Canadian illustrators.

Today, a look at the work of Lewis Parker.

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Parker had a tremendous gift for creating diverse work.

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Just looking at these few examples from some early '60s issues of Maclean's magazine...

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... it's hard to believe that they were all done by the same person.

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In the '50s and '60s, Parker drew countless illustrations for MacLean's. Sometimes they were for full blown articles.

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More often they were small spots for the magazine's news and reviews sections.

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He often drew five or more small spots in a single issue of the magazine...

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... and those spots were rarely all done in the same style.

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Lewis Parker was born in 1926. At age 16, with three years of instruction at Central Technical School, he began his professional art career as a junior apprentice at a Toronto art studio called Rabjohn Illustrators. His pay: three dollars a week.

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There he met - and learned from - many artists who went on to become successful in their own right. But of all those with whom he worked, Parker credits Bert Grassik, a Bert Grassick, a staff illustrator who also did political cartoons for Maclean's and the Toronto Telegram (and someone I previously wrote about on Today's Inspiration) as his single biggest influence.

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Editorial cartooning was often in the mix of Parker's assignments - he did many for both Maclean's and the Toronto Star - and these examples demonstrate his obvious skill in that area of expertise.

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You can read much more about Lewis Parker and see many more examples of his later painted artworks at lewisparker.ca

Matthew Parker also created a 30 minute retrospective of his father's art which you can find on youtube:





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