Artist Profile: Leo and Diane Dillon


The Preserving Machine by Philip K. Dick

The husband-and-wife team Leo (1933 — 2013) and Diane (1933– ) Dillon met while training at Parsons School of Design and married shortly after graduating in 1956.  Over the course of 50 years, they collaborated on over 100 magazine and book covers.  Among numerous awards, the Dillons won the Caldecott Medal in both 1976 and 1977, the only time that the award has been won consecutively.

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Artist Profile: Jerome Rozen (1895 — 1987)


Jerome Rozen was born in Chicago and grew up in Arizona, where he first took art classes from a local teacher.  After serving in the army during World War I, Rozen visited the Louvre in Paris and was inspired to pursue a career as an artist.  Upon returning home, he studied at the Art Institute of Chicago.  He was eventually hired as an instructor at the Institute.  He also found success painting covers for pulp magazines like The Shadow, Battle Stories, Wu Fang Mysteries, and Western Story.  During World War II, Rozen also designed several patriotic posters and magazine advertisements.

A small sampling of his work can be found below.

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Artist Profile: Alex Schomburg (1905 — 1998)


Schomburg

Alex Schomburg was born into a prosperous family in Puerto Rico in 1905.  He moved to New York City in the early 1920s and worked as a freelance artist with his three brothers.  Much of Schomburg’s early freelance work was for Timely Comics, which would later become known as Marvel Comics.  While working for Timely, Schomburg illustrated covers featuring such iconic comic book heroes as Capt. America and the Human Torch.  In the early 1950s, Schomburg left the comics industry and spent the rest of his career doing cover art for science fiction publications.

A small sampling of his work can be found below.

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Artist Profile: Rudolph Zirm (1894 — 1952)


The son of German immigrants, Rudolph Zirm was born in New Jersey.  Though he never had any formal artistic training, Zirm pursued a career as a freelance artist after the print shop he worked at closed in 1933.  Though he only worked as an artist for 6 years and was never acclaimed during his lifetime, Zirm’s work is now highly praised and sought by collectors.

A sampling of his work can be found below.

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Artist Profile: Rowena Morrill (1944– )


Rowena Morrill is considered to be one of the first female artists to have an impact on paperback cover illustration.  After receiving a BA from the University of Delaware in 1971, Morrill studied at the Tyler School Of Art.  After a period spent working for an ad agency in New York, she designed her first horror cover in 1977.  Morrill’s paintings have appeared on hundreds of paperback covers and in magazines like Omni, Playboy, Art Scene International, and Print Magazine.

A small sampling of her work can be found below.

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Artist Profile: Ed Valigursky (1926 — 2009)


The son of Czech immigrants, Ed Valigursky was born in Pennsylvania and served in the U.S. Navy during World War II.  He studied at the Art Institute of Chicago on the G.I. Bill and started doing freelance pulp work while he was still a student.  Until his retirement in 1990, Valigursky painted hundreds of science fiction-themed images.  He also produced several paintings that celebrated the history of aviation.

A small sampling of his work can be found below.

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Artist Profile: Walter Popp (1920–2002)


38286874-High_Priest_of_California_paperback_cover_19531The son of German muralist Gustave Gutgemon, Walter Popp was born in New York and studied art at the New York Phoenix School of Design.  After serving in the U.S. Army during World War II, Popp launched his career as a freelance illustrator.  Popp began as an illustrator for pulp magazines before moving on to painting paperback covers in the 1950s.  He remained active, designing the covers for gothic romance novels, into the 1990s.

A small sampling of his work can be found below.

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