ART
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He distinguished himself in school as a talented artist. In 1908 he joined the Indiana National Guard and served as a Corporal in the 2nd Infantry. On October 4, 1909 he began to study at the John Herron Art Institute in Indianapolis. The pulp artists William M. Allison (1880-1964) and James M. Wilcox (1895-1958) also attended this school. Two years later, on May 27, 1911, he completed his fourth semester at the school. In the fall of 1912 he attended the Cincinnati Art Institute, in Ohio, where he studied with Frank Duveneck (1848-1919). The pulp artists John Drew (1885-1953), Henry C. Kiefer (1890-1957), and Charles L. McCann (1905-1967) all attended this school. In 1914 he moved to Chicago to work as a staff artist at the Thomas Casslock Advertising Company, which was located on the corner of Harrison and Loomit Streets. He also took night classes at the Art Institute of Chicago. He joined the Palette & Chisel Club. Several other Chicago-area pulp artists also belonged to this club, such as C. C. Senf (1873-1949) and Frank Hoban (1870-1943).
On April 12, 1915 he married Helen Gillette Burton in Chicago. She was born May 1, 1889 in Chicago. They moved to 6221 Greenwood Avenue. Their firstborn child, John Andrew Chenoweth, Jr., was born July 12, 1916, but died two days later on July 14, 1916. On June 5, 1917, before the official U.S. entry in The Great War, he reported for draft registration. He was recorded at the time to be twenty-seven, medium build, medium height, blue eyes, light brown hair, with no distinguishing marks. His wife and mother-in-law were listed as dependents with the footnote, "wife in delicate condition." A few month later, on November 25, 1917, their son Maynard Burton Chenoweth was born. In 1919 the family moved to 7343 Luella Avenue, Chicago, IL, where their third child, Philip Andrew Chenoweth, was born on August 21, 1919. During the 1920s he worked in the lucrative world of Chicago advertising and also illustrated stories in Woman's World and The American Magazine.He also received several commissions to paint murals in opulent private homes, such as the Cheek Mansion on Nashville, Tennessee and the McKinney mansion in Titusville, Pennsylvania. In 1924 he taught painting at the American Academy of Art in Chicago. In 1927 he moved to the East Coast to pursue a career as a freelance magazine illustrator. He lived at 17 Wyoming Gulf Road in Wyoming, New York. The town of Wyoming, NY, is near Buffalo in the far northwest area of the state. The train from his home to NYC took twelve hours, so he also opened a separate art studio in New York City at 40 West 45th Street. He became a member of the New York Guild of Free Lance Artists, which evolved into the NY Society of Illustrators. In the fall of 1929 his wife was in a serious auto accident when her car was struck by a runaway truck hauling stone for a local roadway project. In 1931 he sold his home in Wyoming,NY, and moved to 35-64 80th Street in Jackson Heights, Queens, NY.
When the Great Depression came he had to find another
source of income besides the moribund advertising industry. Although major
nationwide magazines were facing hard times the pulp magazine industry
had entered its most profitable period. He was soon a top cover artist
for the pulp magazine Blue Book, along with Dean Cornwell (1892-1960) and
Herbert Morton Stoops (1887-1948). Blue Book, Adventure, Argosy and Short
Stories were the "Big Four" pulp magazines, with the best fiction, best
sales, and best rates of pay. Blue Book was published by the Chicago-based
McCall company, for which Chenoweth had previously worked. On December
2, 1937 his wife died at the age of forty-eight. In 1938 he married his
second wife, Edwina Biddle, who was born October 5, 1891 in Chicago. She
was a widow. Her full-grown married daughter, Mrs. Doris Stangor, was born
1920 in NYC. On June 10, 1942 his son Maynard received a doctoral degree
in medicine from Cornell University. His other son Philip also received
a doctoral degree. He graduated from Columbia University, where he was
a member of the Rifle Club. During WWII Joseph Chenoweth reported for draft
registration and was recorded at the time to be fifty-three, five-ten,
175 pounds, blue eyes, grayish brown hair, a light complexion and a mole
on his left temple. After retiring from illustration he enjoyed leisurely
vacations. During the summer of 1957 he and Edwina visited Bermuda on a
cruise, and in the fall they visited England on the Queen Mary luxury liner.
Joseph Chenoweth died in New York City at the age of seventy-seven on May
19, 1967.
© David Saund
Cho, Frank
Frank Cho (Artist)
1971 Seoul, South Korea
Liberty Meadows with Schecky the Jungle King ~ Steady
run of ERB-related art in fanzines, Cons and comic publications
59 Cirielo, Averardo
60 Claremont, Christopher
England (Artist, Editor)
Richard Clifton-Dey
was a British artist born in Yorkshire. He started
painting in the 1960s and was one of the most highly respected of British
illustrators during the 1970s and into the 1980s. Much of his work was
for book covers, either for science fiction, fantasy, action-adventure
war books, romances, or gothic horror (with some interesting forays into
juvenile editions and advertising). His cover artwork was used for
a string of UK paperback releases of ERB titles. His cover art was featured
on a multitude of books by other popular authors including Philip José
Farmer, Andre Norton, Ray Bradbury, Zane Grey, Michael Moorcock, Robert
E. Howard, James Herriot, etc.
https://www.ERBzine.com/chaser
https://www.ERBzine.com/events
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