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Friday, October 12, 2007

Magazine Illustration Part 2: HOLIDAY magazine




Arguably the high point of Searle's career was during the 50s & 60s when his style found a comfortable median between overtly cartoony & more realistic reportage such as the REFUGEE drawings. He had numerous commisions from American HOLIDAY magazine & was sent all over the world to capture the exotic & esoteric in his inimatable style. From German brothels to the Alaskan wilderness the drawings he produced for HOLIDAY are amongst his finest.












Alternative version-


Excerpt from an interview with Frank Zachary, picture editor of HOLIDAY Magazine during the fifties:

"While photography was the back bone of Holiday, illustration was its soul. Zachary was underwhelmed by the prevailing sentimental illustrative approach found in most American magazines, and eyed Europe, specifically England and France, for the surrealistic comic vision he was looking for. "Frank brought sophisticated illustration to American magazines," recalls Sam Antupit. "Other art directors brought powerful or clever images, but Frank bought an unprecedented sophistication. Of course it came from Europe since in the early Fifties there weren't too many Americans practicing sophisticated pen work . . ."



". . . Holiday artists like Ronald Searle, Andre François, Roland Topor, Folon, Tomi Ungerer, Comenico Gnoli and Edward Gorey (one of the few native Americans practicing out of the mainstream) were given great latitude to develop their own stories and portfolios. Zachary avoided using the reigning stars because "that would be too easy," but chose to discover his own new galaxy. In most cases the artists actually transformed themselves in this environment. "I got people like Ronald Searle," remembers Zachary, "to do a feature on something like the London hotel scene. The first result was pretty straightforward, so I asked him to satirize it or just make it funny, and almost overnight, he changed his style, becoming the Searle that you and I know today." Searle concurs: "Frank gave me a lot of firsts. From around 1959 to 1969, he gave me all the space one could dream of, the chance to fill it with color, the freedom to travel and what proved to be the last of the great reportages. Off to Alaska! Cover all of Canada! Bring me ten pages on the dirty bits of Hamburg! No expense spared. The years of travel for Frank gave me experiences that cannot be bought. There was always one problem: he always called me 'Arnold' instead of Ronald. But then, he probably always called Arnold Newman 'Ronald,' so it balanced out."

Copyright 1991 by The American Institute of Graphic Arts.

 The magazine even published a letter of complaint from  illustrator John Maass in April 1957.

'HOLIDAY'S Art Director received the following from the artist who illustrated Punial's First American in the February issue:

Dear Mr Zacharie:
I don't know who is to blame at Curtiss.  Is it Mr Patric? Mr Beimiller? ANyway, my name is misspelled in the February issue of HOLIDAY.

John Maass
Philadelphia

Mr. M proved his point.  Messrs. Zachary, Patrick and Biemiller of HOLIDAY, Curtis Publishing Company, will never forget it. - Ed.'







SIGNED, INSCRIBED 'PALM SPRINGS' AND DATED 1963 PEN INK AND WATERCOLOUR 19 X 14 INCHES

ILLUSTRATED: HOLIDAY, NEW YORK, FEBRUARY 1965







HOLIDAY Magazine, February 1965







HOLIDAY MAGAZINE, APRIL 1962, FEATURE ON FLORIDA PEN AND INK 14 X 10 INCHES




















Hawaii:Hotel Street, Honolulu HOLIDAY Magazine December 1965




Hawaii: Oahu HOLIDAY Magazine December 1965



Morocco: Family, Casablanca HOLIDAY Magazine September 1966





Germany: Black Forest HOLIDAY Magazine October 1964







'Welcome to the Reeperbahn', 1967 Pen & Wash

HOLIDAY Magazine January 1968



Canada: Hudson's Bay HOLIDAY Magazine April 1964.

This would later lead to a commission from The Hudson's Bay Company to illustrate their calender, the drawings for which were subsequently published in the book THE GREAT FUR OPERA, 1970.







HOLIDAY Magazine, March 1964







Frank Zachary would later go on to have a brief tenure as Art Director of TRAVEL & LEISURE Magazine & would again commision travel sketches from Searle.





TRAVEL & LEISURE autumn 1971 Original stolen New York.







'Shrine', 1975 Pen & Watercolour

Travel & Leisure Magazine, New York August 1975







'Crete', 1965 Pen & Watercolour

Venture Magazine, New York April 1966







SIGNED, INSCRIBED WITH TITLE AND DATED 1989 PEN INK AND WATERCOLOUR WITH CRAYON 15 X 15 1/2 INCHES

ILLUSTRATED: CONDE NAST TRAVEL MAGAZINE, APRIL 1990, 'LONDON' BY DAVID MAMET





Holiday magazine April 1961




San Francisco is the destination of Holiday's sumptuous April 1961 issue: It is a San Francisco of another time and place, one in which, even half a century later, the glamour, color, drive, grit and sheer wonder of the place is rekindled by a leaf through the magazine. This issue of Curtis Publishing's Holiday portrayed a city in love with itself and its past, yet teetering on the edge of a roiling future.
Holiday, Vol. 29, No. 4 is image-rich front to back. Its cover is a pastiche by David Stone Martin of "painted lady" Victorians, cable cars, Coit Tower, Chinatown and the Golden Gate Bridge. Inside are paintings by Asian American painter Dong Kingman and a biting pen-and-ink send-up of San Francisco society by caricaturist Ronald Searle titled "Morbid Anatomy of the San Francisco Society Lady."



 1959 (Issue?) Las Vegas; July 1962 Tribal America; December 1963 Florida; July 1963
Alaska; April 1963 Dublin; March 1964 Wall Street; February 1965 Palm Springs;
May 1964 Canada; October 1964 Germany; February 1966 New England Skiing;
July 1964 New York World Fair; July 1965 Reno, Nevada; September 1966 Casablanca
Morocco; December 1965 Hawaii; July 1965 The Catskills; January 1968 Hamburg Night
Life;  August 1968 Grand Central Station; September 1968 The Traveller's Club, Paris;
November 1968 Papa Doc, Haiti

4 comments:

Mick said...

the more i see the more entrancing it becomes. i think the sun shines out of this lads pants. A brilliant original, good for him and good for you for putting it together

Chloe Cumming said...

Thank you so much for posting these Matt. This blog is way up there on my links list. Aren't many draftspersons of this calibre knocking about nowadays.

Ann ODyne said...

I grew up with the genius of Searle. bless him. a genius.
thanks for this gallery

peas and love

(I found your site via link at Aint No Sanity Clause blog)

illustrationISM.... said...

'amen' to mick's comment
"the more i see
the more
entrancing it
becomes."

count me as one
of searle's admirers.
whenever i go to
yard or
garage sales, i'm always going through the old magazine stacks
looking
for these issues!
his line work
is
mesmerizing!


mark jaquette @
ism &
BAMm