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Craig, Frank |
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| Frank Craig could
easily get lost in the host of "society" illustrators that cropped up at the
turn of the century in the wake of Charles Dana Gibson. His work is
virtually unknown outside of a small cadre of illustration aficionados and
I'm willing to wager that not many of you reading this page are familiar
with him. I hope this changes that imbalance a little. Once you look at his
work you realize how unique and special he was.
He worked on staff at The Graphic, an important British weekly news magazine, and submitted to the Royal Academy and the Paris salons. He had paintings purchased by both England and France and won a gold medal for portraiture at one of the early 20th century Paris Salons. He also worked for Nash's Magazine. The fragments of data I've been able to acquire (most with the help of Fred Taraba and Ann Marshall of Illustration House - thanks, folks) indicate that he was well-respected for his color work. I've only been able to turn up the one two-color sample below and one other later in the page. He continued to work in the U.S. and I've found his work in McClures Magazine from 1902-1904, Harpers from 1907 to 1914, and Scribner's again from 1904 on and off through 1914. He was also much in demand as a book illustrator and his work accompanied some of the era's most famous authors: Rudyard Kipling, R.W. Chambers, F. Marion Crawford, Arnold Bennett, Maurice Hewlett, to name a few. Some examples: |
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Both of his Chambers titles, Athalie and
The Girl Philippa (1917) were profusely illustrated (30 & 32 plates,
respectively) and represent some of his finest work.
Craig was very much the portrait painter and many of his compositions are derived from that experience. Still, his lighting and staging are superb and the images occasionally approach a photo-realism that was uncommon in his day. I'm often struck by thoughts of Abbey when viewing some of his work, as witness the image left. This was an illustration for a poem in Scribner's for April of 1914.
Craig battled with ill-health most of his life and was forced to leave London for Surrey and then, in 1916, he went to Portugal. In April of 1918, he had a successful gallery show in Lisbon, featuring about thirty of his paintings. It was a timely tribute, because a few weeks later, he died. He was 44. |
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| Information supplied by: http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/craig.htm | |||