tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7589105760911453392.post5406942231160269412..comments2024-03-28T15:08:55.350-07:00Comments on Art Contrarian: Austin Briggs, an Illustrator Who Could Really DrawDonald Pittengerhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/11307228686847434740noreply@blogger.comBlogger1125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7589105760911453392.post-60231403086279973612016-11-14T08:25:05.326-08:002016-11-14T08:25:05.326-08:00DP—
I can't tell you how much I enjoy your bl...<br />DP—<br /><br />I can't tell you how much I enjoy your blogs. Once again you have posted the work of an excellent artist who should be given more attention.<br /><br />You wrote, "Austin Briggs (1908-1973) never settled into a distinctive style, shifting over time according to his personal artistic development and the influence of changing illustration fashions and client expectations."<br /><br />Most things like this are a matter of opinion but I don't totally agree with this statement. I think Briggs had very distinctive style—one that he was well settled into by the time he hit the big publications. You are right that he is probably best known for his ability to draw and paint people. But there is something much more than that. All the top illustrators could draw and paint people well.<br /><br />Briggs' figures were not just drawn well they were natural looking. They didn't look posed. In short, they were believable. I think what made his illustrations great was they were extremely unpretentious—void of any flamboyant technique. This coincided with his natural looking figures producing a believable picture. The viewer could identify with the figures in a Briggs illustration. This was so important at a time when photography was elbowing illustration out the door.<br /><br />There were very few illustrators who could pull this off. One of the few was Berie Fuchs in his early work. Fuchs' early style was an emulation of Briggs. However, most of Fuchs' early work had slicker look than that of Briggs. And some of the poses of Fuchs' figures were posed to look like they were casual—natural looking. <br /><br />Keep up the wonderful work,<br />Paul <br />Paul Sullivanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07953800994005887026noreply@blogger.com