Thursday, 14 February 2008

robert g harris 1911 2007



ROBERT G. HARRIS (1911-2007)

The illustrator Robert G. Harris died a few weeks ago at the age of

96. His career spanned many of the glory years of illustration.

Harris learned art at the feet of early masters such as Harvey Dunn

and George Bridgman. He illustrated everything from crude pulps to

refined magazines for women. (This WW II illustration of a war bride

learning the fate of her soldier husband appeared in the latter).

As a successful illustrator in an era when illustrations helped to

shape the national imagination, Harris could afford to build a large

home and studio in fabled Westport, Connecticut with three cars in his

garage and his own private sea-plane at the beach. As the illustration

field grew, the top talent from around the country flocked to Westport

to try their luck. Soon, Harris found Westport was becoming too

crowded. Harris' friend, the great illustrator Al Parker, explained

that early illustrators such as Harris sought out Westport for its

"cornfields and crickets." When the open fields filled with houses,

Parker followed Harris to Arizona.

Harris continued to work and paint in Scottsdale Arizona. With his

death, another chapter in the long and colorful history of

illustration comes to a close.


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