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ARTIST: Jon Whitcomb (Connecticut, Oklahoma, 1906 - 1988) NAME: John Bull Magazine Cover - Woman's Work MEDIUM: oil on canvasboard CONDITION: Excellent. No visible inpaint under UV light. SIGHT SIZE: 21 x 14 inches / 53 x 35 cm FRAME SIZE: 28 x 20 inches / 70 x 50 cm SIGNATURE: Upper left SIMILAR ARTISTS: Walter Martin, Stanley Arthurs, Stanley Klimley, Stanley Zuckerberg, David Blossom, August Bleser Jr, Rockwell Kent, Harrison Cady, Dan Smith, Maud Fangel, Frank Schoonover, George McManus, Robert Kennedy Abbett, Mitchell Hooks, Tom Ryan, Albert Wenzell CATEGORY: antique vintage painting SKU#: 115208 WARRANTY: 7 days returns accepted if item doesn't match description US Shipping $75 + insurance. Jon Whitcomb (Connecticut, Oklahoma, 1906 - 1988) Illustrator, Jon Whitcomb was born in Weatherford, Oklahoma, and raised in Manitowic, Wisconsin. He attended Ohio Wesleyan University and graduated from Ohio State where he did pictures for the school publications and worked during the summer painting posters for a theater in Cleveland. Whitcomb majored in English with an ambition to write, but switched to art classes. After graduation he was able to obtain work in a series of studios doing travel and theater posters, as well as general advertising illustrations. In 1934, he moved to New York to combine studio work with free-lance illustration. His first illustrations were for Collier's, followed by Good Housekeeping, and then the others in succession as Whitcomb's pretty girls began to attract enthusiastic readership. His career was interrupted by World War II when he was commissioned a Lieutenant, j.g. in the Navy. His assignments varied from mine-sweeping duty to off the East coast, to the Public Relations Department in Washington, to the Pacific as a combat artist with the invasions of Tinian, Saipan, and Peleliu. After hospitalization for tropical infections, he was discharged in 1945 and resumed his art career. During World War II, a series of illustrations for advertisements he created on the theme, "Back Home for Keeps," became a pin-up fad for women deprived of their husbands or sweethearts. Whitcomb's writing ability became useful when he began to do a monthly series of sketches and articles about motion picture stars for Cosmopolitan, called "On Location with Jon Whitcomb." He has also written several short stories, two children's books about poodles, Coco, and Pom Pom's Christmas, and a book about feminine glamour, All About Girls.