Photographer Unknown, (Fading Signs of the Times)
Category: advertising
Nob Hill Theater
Photographer Unknown, Nob Hill Theatre
Tiger Beer
Tiger Beer Advertisement
The D.J. Contour
Photographer Unknown, (The D. J. Contour)
Year of the Rooster
Advertisement for Cock
The official start of the Year of the Rooster in the Chinese Zodiac began on 28 January, 2017.
Arthur Radebaugh
Advertising the Future: Illustrations by Arthur Radebaugh
Arthur Radebaugh was born in Coldwater, Michigan in 1906. He developed his interest in art and briefly attended the renowned Art Institute in Chicago. It was there that Radebaugh first began experimenting with airbrush painting, a technique he helped popularize and used throughout his career.
One of his first clients in 1935 was MoToR Magazine, which purchased a painting for $450 and used it for the highly coveted cover of the Annual issue through 1957. With the exception of years 1941-1946, he designed covers for every Annual issue through 1957. Radebaugh’s artistic vision of the future fell in line with the forward-thinking nature of the automotive trade shows that the Annual issues were published to coincide with.
His paintings drew heavily upon the art deco movement of the 1920s through the 1940s, though his style would evolve with the passage of time. His renderings of the future were inspired by the context of his present.
Radebaugh’s work with MoToR garnered him widespread attention, and his list of clients grew to include several big-name brands including the Saturday Evening Post, Fortune, Coca-Cola, and United Airlines. The automotive industry also took note, with Chrysler contracting him to do artwork for their 1939 Dodge Luxury Liner sales literature and advertisements. For the marque’s 25th anniversary, Radebaugh blended the present with the future by painting the 1939 model year cars in front of lush science-fiction-inspired cityscapes. These are shown in images two and three of this blog post.
Cinelli
Photographer Unknown, Cinelli
Cinelli is an Italian bicycle manufacturing company based in Milan, Italy. It was founded in 1948 by Cino Cinelli, a former professional road racer and president of the Italian Cyclists’ Association. He was a professional racer from 1937 to 1944, winning the Milan-San Remo in 1943, the Giro di Lombardia in 1938, and the Tour of the Apennines in 1937.
The Fak Hongs
Artist Unknown, Circa-1930 Stone lLthograph for the Magician Troupe “The Fak Hongs”
In the first decades of the twentieth-century, a type of magic show known as the “Oriental Magician” was very popular. The early exploration of China at the turn of the century by Europeans provided material for practicing magicians to incorporate into their performances. A type of magic show known as the “Oriental Magician”, in which Western magicians donned stereotypical oriental attire, became very popular throughout Europe.
One of these was the magician Fak Hong, a European who performed in Japanese robes and haircut similar to those of samurai warriors. Renowned throughout Europe during the 1920s and 1930s, his troupe, the Fak-Hongs”, dressed as Asian mystics and performed such magic as levitation and cutting women in half.
Due to his show’s popularity, Fak Hong formed a second troupe which was led by the illusionist Chang, the stage name of Juan José Pablo Jesorum, a native of Panama. The two groups, now known collectively as “Chang and Fak-Hong’s United Magicians” successfully toured Europe, America, and South America. Several of their performances highlighted illusions such as “Invisible Man”, “Hari-Kari”, “Noah’s Ark”, and “Night in Tokyo”.
Joseph Christian Leyendecker
Paintings by Joseph Christian Leyendecker
Born in March of 1874 in Montabaur, a collective-municipality of the German Empire, Joseph Christiana Leyendecker was a German-American illustrator, best known for his book and advertising illustrations. In 1862, the family immigrated to Chicago, Illinois, where Leyendecker’s uncle, Adam Ortseifen,
was vice-president of the McAvoy Brewing Company, one of Chicago’s largest breweries before Prohibition. At the age of sixteen, J. C. Leyendecker joined the engraving house of J. Manz & Company as an apprentice.
Leyendecker later advanced to the level of full-time staff artist at Manz & Company and completed his first commercial commission there, sixty Bible illustrations for an edition published by Manz. He enrolled at the Chicago Art Institute, where he began formal training in drawing and anatomy under the Dutch-American artist John Vanderpoel. The first in-print acknowledgement of Leyendecker’s artwork was in the April-September 1895 issue of the “Inland Printer” which described his work for Manz and featured a sketch and two book cover illustrations done for publisher E. A. Weeks.
In 1896, J. C, Leyendecker and his younger brother Francis Xavier, also an illustrator, traveled to Paris where they both enrolled at the Académie Julian under the tutelage of painters Adolphe Bouguereau and Jean-Paul Laurens, and the etcher and painter Benjamin Constant, who was best known for his portraits and Oriental subjects.
While studying the Neo-classical painting style of the academy, both brothers also became familiar with the popular style of illustrated advertisements executed by such artists as Jules Cherêt, Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec, and Alphonso Mucha, a prominent member of the French Art Nouveau movement.
Upon return to the United States in 1897, the Leyendecker brothers settled in Chicago’s Hyde Park area and opened a studio in the Fine Arts Building on South Michigan Street. Joseph Leyendecker received his first commission for a Saturday Evening Post cover on May 20th of 1897, which began a forty-four year association with the magazine. During his career, he created three-hundred twenty-two cover paintings for the Saturday Evening Post; he also did work for Collier’s magazine where he produced forty-eight cover illustrations.
In 1900, the brothers moved to New York City, which had established itself as the commercial advertising capital of the nation, and set up shop in the Bryant Park Studios. It was here in New York City that the two brothers would each establish a successful career as an illustrator. In 1903 at the age of twenty-nine, J. C. Leyendecker met Charles Beach, a young man from Ontario, Canada, who was looking for work as a model. Beach became
the main inspiration for the Arrow Collar Man, a model for Leyendecker’s other commissions, and, later, his business manager. He was also Leyendecker’s life partner for the majority of their lives.
J. C. Leyendecker helped define the modern magazine cover as a unique art form. Conveying a wide range of human emotions, his paintings were done in his hallmark style of crisp, wide and controlled brushstrokes accented by bold highlights. Leyendecker’s greatest fame, however, came from his menswear commissions. In 1905, he convinced the advertising director of Cluett, Peabody & Company, a clothing manufacturer, to utilize a single male image to represent all of their products. The result was not only the first major branding initiative in advertising but also the first real advertising campaign ever launched. The campaign of Leyendecker’s handsome, stylishly dressed man, the Arrow Collars and Shirts Man, was so successful that the Cluett company’s market share grew to ninety-six per cent.
This Arrow Collars and Shirts Man resonated with the public and became the established image of the ideal, fashionable American male, an icon that helped mold the idea of a glamorous lifestyle and the Roaring Twenties. Leyendecker followed this success with illustrations of chiseled-faced men wearing suits from The House of Kuppenheimer, socks from the Interwoven Stocking Company, and
underwear from the Cooper Underwear company. Starting in 1912, Leyendecker began a successful series of twenty commissioned advertisements for the cereal company Kellogg’s, which featured children and adolescents enjoying bowls of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes.
Both having achieved success in New York City, the two Leyendecker brothers decided to relocate in 1914 to New Rochelle, a suburb of New York City. A number of illustrators and other artists had already relocated to this community, including Norman Rockwell, Frederic Remington, and Orson Lowell. The Leyendeckers built a fourteen room mansion with two studio workspaces; upon the residence’s completion, they were joined by their sister, Mary Augusta, and Charles Beach. This estate, which became the site of numerous large galas hosted by Leyendecker and Beach, would be the residence for their final years together.
During the First World War, J. C. Leyendecker created posters in support of the nation’s war effort; these were used to urge young men to enlist, promote the purchase of war bonds, and urge the general public to conserve resources necessary for the military. After years of tension in the New Rochelle residence,
both Frank and Mary Augusta Leyendecker moved out in 1923; Frank Leyendecker died of an overdose in the following year.
Although affected greatly by his brother’s death, Leyendecker’s commercial success continued to increase throughout the 1920s. However, by the end of the 1930s, the demand for Leyendecker’s style of imagery had waned; the use of illustration in advertisements had begun to be overshadowed by the growing use of photographic imagery. By 1945, editorial changes at the Saturday Evening Post caused the end of Leyendecker’s long relationship with the magazine. Leyendecker found his finances failing; he was able to keep himself solvent through calendar commissions and covers for William Randolph Hearst’s magazine, The American Weekly.
J. C. Leyendecker outlived many of his friends. He died of an acute coronary occlusion, at the age of seventy-seven, on July 25th of 1951 at his New Rochelle estate. Only five individuals attended his funeral; Norman Rockwell and three of Leyendecker’s favorite male models acted as pallbearers. Leyendecker is buried, alongside his parents and brother Frank, at Woodlawn Cemetery in The Bronx, New York City. What was left of his estate, including a number of original canvases, was divided between Charles Beach, his forty-nine year partner, and his sister Mary Augusta.
Charles Allwood Beach died of a heart attack on June 21st of 1954 at New Rochelle. The register for St. Paul’s Church, New Rochelle, indicates interment at Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, Westchester County, New York. Beach is noted as being interned in January of 1975 at the Ferncliff Mausoleum, Unit 8, Niche L-0001; however, this section is not open to the public
The Window’s Display
Through Time and Space: When Art Enters the World of the Window Display
“I discovered windows one afternoon and after that, nothing was ever the same.” – The Shape of Water
“A breeze, a forgotten summer, a smile, all can fit into a storefront window.”
― Dejan Stojanovic
“But Einstein came along and took space and time out of the realm of stationary things and put them in the realm of relativity—giving the onlooker dominion over time and space, because time and space are modes by which we think and not conditions in which we live.”
― Dimitri Marianoff, Einstein: An Intimate Study of a Great Man
Adolfo de Carolis
Adolfo de Carolis, “International Exposition of Industries- Turin, Poster, 1911
Adolfo de Carolis was an Italian painter, wood-cut printer, illustrator and photographer. In 1888, after finishing primary school , he was sent to study at the Accademaia di Belle Arti di Bologna from which he graduated in 1892. His first professional work was a collaborative restoration of the Borgia Apartments in the Apostolic Palace.
In 1899, de Carolis participated int eh 3rd exposition held by the Venice Biennale. He received a commission the following year to design a bronze tabernacle for the baptismal font at the Ajaccio Cathedral. After 1902, Adolfo de Carolis concentrated on creating illustrations for artistic and literary publications for books by Carducci, Pascoli and D’Annunzio.
Adolfo de Carolis’s Turin Interanational poster was designed in 1911 to celebrate this world fair which focused on industry and labor. The fair opened on the 29th of April and covered an area of 247 acres. Over four million visitors attended the pavilions of over thirty countries.
You Can Have X-Ray Vision
Artist Unknown, (You Can Have X-Ray Vision)
Hibiki Whiskey
Hibiki Whiskey
“Earlier this year, Osaka-based Suntory shocked the world by announcing acquisition of proudly American brands Jim Beam and Maker’s Mark but lest you misunderstand their intention as some untoward occupation of quintessential Americana like beer and alcohol, one has to understand the foundations of Japanese artisan philosophy is that of complete mastery. Theirs’ is the ability to absorb and improve everything from cocktails to couture. When it comes to whiskey, Japan has close to a hundred years of heritage.
In 1923, Shinjiro Torii envisioned a whisky filled with the essence of Japanese nature and hand-crafted by artisans through a patient process of enhancing the work of nature. He dreamt of creating subtle, refined, yet complex whisky that would suit the delicate palate of the Japanese and enhance their dining experience. Inspired by traditional Scottish whisky.
Seductive, blossoming and enigmatic, Hibiki celebrates an unrivaled art of blending, fine craftsmanship and a sense of luxury from the House of Suntory. Hibiki is not only Japan’s most highly awarded blended whisky, but among the most prestigious and honoured whiskies in the world. It stands shoulder to shoulder with the relatively affordable Yamazaki and Hakushu range.” – TheMonsieur.com
Thanks to http://3leapfrogs.tumblr.com
Vintage Neon Gas Station Signs
Vintage Neon Gas Station Signs
Georges Claude patented the neon lighting tube on Jan. 19th, 1915 – U.S. Patent 1,125,476.
In 1923, Georges Claude and his French company Claude Neon, introduced neon gas signs to the United States, by selling two to a Packard car dealership in Los Angeles. Earle C. Anthony purchased the two signs reading “Packard” for $24,000.
Neon lighting quickly became a popular fixture in outdoor advertising. Visible even in daylight, people would stop and stare at the first neon signs dubbed “liquid fire.”
Magician Posters
Vintage Magician Posters from the Early 20th Century













































