| Petty, George |
George Petty is
most famous for his pin-up drawings that appeared in Esquire magazine
in the 1930's and the covers for many Ice Capades programs. Petty
was born in 1894 in Louisiana, the son of a photographer who moved his
family to the potentially more prosperous Chicago around 1900. George
survived traditional schooling, though he thrived at evening classes at the
Chicago Art Institute. He spent a great deal of time in his father's
photography studio where he mastered the airbrush, a tool invented around
1889 and used solely to retouch photographs (or their negatives). Petty
would help change that.Prior to World War I, study in Europe was de rigueur for the aspiring artist. After his graduation from high school, Petty's mother took George and his sister to Paris where he was enrolled at the Académie Julian. This art school was quite famous and had such illustrious alumni as John Singer Sargent, Alfonse Mucha, Matisse, and, most significant to Petty, J.C. Leyendecker. George studied in Paris until 1916, then returned to Chicago. At the age of 18, he should have been prime fodder for the War, but shortly have Petty's return from Europe, his father died, leaving George the head of the family and so exempt from service. |
![]() Not
wanting to be a photographer or a photo-retoucher, he closed
his father's studio and went to work for an ad agency, where his first
published work was a stylish ice skater on the cover of the 1920 Marshall
Field catalog (at right). Ice skaters were to figure prominently in his
future. At the agencies, Petty excelled at retouching and his skill with the
airbrush was prodigious. He did lots and lots of retouching, all the while
focusing his efforts on breaking into the illustration market. There were
plenty of advertisements, but his few covers and magazine assignments led
nowhere. He began using the airbrush in his drawings, not a common medium at
the time, but the results were stunning, like the poster at left that won
Petty first prize in the 1933 Chicago World's Fair poster contest.
In the early Thirties, George opened his own
studio and started to get more and more work that relied on pretty women.
His daughter Marjorie Jule, born in 1919, was Petty's work was in that first issue, a cartoon. He wasn't a cartoonist, but that's what the magazine needed and they were willing to supply him with situations and gags. The drawings he submitted were printed full page on good paper and the magazine's 10"x14" format was perfect for the slick, well-rendered images George was capable of. With his command of the airbrush, a strong foundation in drawing, plenty of practice drawing lissome women, and a willing model, Petty had assembled the components of a meteoric career. His cartoons appeared in seven of the first dozen issues and were thinly disguised excuses for rendering the female body. Even when they were fully clothed, his women looked like, if you'll pardon the expression, their clothes were airbrushed on.Witness the "cartoon" at above right from a 1935 issue and also issued as part of a spiral-bound portfolio of Petty cartoons from 1937 titled aptly enough, Petty - A Portfolio. The exposure brought Petty to the attention of national ad agencies and within two years George was doing monthly ads for Old Gold Cigarettes and Janzen Swim Wear as well as others, many of which appeared in the same issues of Esquire as his cartoons. The cartoons were a huge success. Quickly
dubbed The Petty Girl, the public It's rather difficult to convey just how famous Petty became - and how fast! This rather obscure Chicago commercial artist was suddenly thrust upon the national stage, literally, overnight. His signature was prominently displayed in all of his advertising work. Janzen created the "Petty Girl" swimsuit in 1940. Old Gold offered prints of the Petty Girls in their ads. His hands, a brush, and Petty Girl appeared in a watch ad. He was given highly publicized commissions to paint posters for films. The aforementioned portfolio was released. In 1942, when 3700 Chicago high school art students cast their votes for most important artist from their three years of art studies, Petty won first place - as a write-in. He did a cover for Time in 1942 as well as the first in a line of covers for the annual Ice Capades revue. And it would incorrect to attribute all the fame to the Esquire pin-ups. If anything, it was his national advertising images that got him the most attention - and money.
And he never ceased working. He did a calendar for Ridge Tools in 1953. He returned to Esquire with a 1955 calendar, designed the hood ornaments for the 1954 and 1955 Nash automobiles and in the early Sixties was back doing paintings for The Ice Capades. Petty died in 1975 after witnessing a minor revival of his work, including a new pin-up for the 40th anniversary issue of Esquire. |
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Information supplied by: http://www.bpib.com/illustrat/petty.htm |