Everett Kinstler
Everett Kinstler | |
---|---|
Born |
Everett Raymond Kinstler August 5, 1926 New York City, U.S. |
Alma mater | Art Students League of New York |
Awards | Inkpot Award, 2006 |
Everett Raymond Kinstler (born August 5, 1926, in New York City) is an American artist, whose official portraits include Presidents Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan.[1] He is also a former pulp and comic book artist, whose work appeared mainly in the 1940s and 1950s.
Life and work
Everett Kinstler was born in New York City in 1926.[2] He started his career age 16, drawing comic books, paperback book covers, and book and magazine illustrations.[1] He studied at the Art Students League of New York and later taught there (1969 – 1974).[3] Kinstler also studied at the National Academy of Design.[3]
Kinstler's influences included Alex Raymond, James Montgomery Flagg, Milton Caniff, and Hal Foster.[3]
Kinstler's pulp illustrations number in the hundreds, and cover many different genres including western, romance, crime, mystery, and war. Popular Publications was among the largest publishers of pulps in which his black-and-white illustrations appeared.
In comic books, he was particularly known for his western and romance comic work. He worked extensively for Avon Periodicals, as well as Ziff-Davis Publishing Company, Dell/Western Publishing, National Periodicals/DC Comics, St. John Publications, Atlas Comics/Marvel Comics, and Gilberton. The titles he spent the most time on were Avon's Realistic Romances, Witchcraft, and White Princess of the Jungle; and Ziff-Davis/St. John's Nightmare.
Beginning in the 1950s Kinstler shifted into the realm of portrait painting. He has painted over 1200 portraits of leading figures in business, entertainment and government, including official portraits of Presidents Gerald Ford and Ronald Reagan.[1]
Awards
- Elected to the National Academy of Design, in 1970
- Copley Medal from the Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, in 1999
- Inkpot Award, in 2006
Comics bibliography (selected)
As either cover artist, interior penciller/inker or both:
Avon Periodicals
- Butch Cassidy and the Wild Bunch
- Jesse James
- Kit Carson
- Geronimo
- Last of the Comanches
- Western Bandits
- Wild Bill Hickok
- The Masked Bandit
- The Dalton Boys
- Sheriff Bob Dixon's Chuck Wagon
- Realistic Romances
- Romantic Love
- Intimate Confessions
- Prison Break
- Eerie
- Murderous Gangsters
- Prison Riot
- War Dogs of the U.S. Army
- Boy Detective
- Phantom Witch Doctor
- White Princess of the Jungle
Dell Comics
- Zorro
- Four Color
- #491: Silvertip
- #534: Ernest Haycox's Western Marshall
- #651: Luke Short's King Colt
- #723: Santiago
Other publishers
- Flash Comics (National Periodicals)
- The Black Terror (Nedor Comics)
- The Black Hood (MLJ Comics)
- All-American Comics (All-American Publications)
- Blazing Sixguns (I. W. Publications)
- Wyatt Earp (Marvel Comics)
- Cinderella Love (Ziff-Davis/St. John Publications)
- Nightmare (Ziff-Davis/St. John Publications)
- Perfect Love (Ziff-Davis/St. John Publications)
- Strange Worlds (Atlas Comics)
- The World Around Us (Gilberton)
- Mystery Tales (Marvel)
- Thrilling Comics (Standard Comics)
Gallery
-
Graphic art for White Princess of the Jungle
-
Graphic art for Strange Worlds
-
Graphic art for Kaanga
References
- 1 2 3 "Biography," Kinstler official website. Retrieved 23 June 2007.
- ↑ Kinstler entry, Artcylcopedia. Accessed June 30, 2014.
- 1 2 3 Kinstler bio, Who's Who of American Comics, 1928–1999. Accessed July 1, 2014.