Gayle Porter Hoskins

Gayle Porter Hoskins (July 20, 1887 – January 14, 1962) was an American illustrator. Hoskins began his training at the Chicago Art Institute and later studied under Howard Pyle in Wilmington, Delaware.[1]

Gayle Hoskins
Born
Gayle Porter Hoskins

(1887-07-20)July 20, 1887
DiedJanuary 14, 1962(1962-01-14) (aged 74)
NationalityAmerican
Known forIllustration

Life and art

Frank E. Schoonover Studios at 1616 Rodney Street, Wilmington where Hoskins lived and worked.

He was born in Brazil, Indiana to William "Pica" Thompson Hoskins, a sheet-music dealer, and Madge Porter Hoskins in 1887.[2] The family moved to Denver, Colorado five years later. About 1901, he began publishing cartoons in the Denver Post. Three years later his mother died and the family moved back east to Chicago. Hoskins then studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and studied under Charles Francis Browne, Frank Phoenix, Thomas Wood Stevens, and John Vanderpoel. He began working for Marshall Field and Company as a mural designer and published illustrations in Redbook in 1907.[1]

Howard Pyle invited Hoskins to study at Pyle's school in Wilmington in 1907. Hoskins studied there until 1910 under Pyle and later under Frank Schoonover. He became a nationally known illustrator by 1918 publishing in Harper's Weekly, Good Housekeeping, Liberty, Saturday Evening Post, Cosmopolitan, and other magazines.[1][3]

Hoskins married his first wife, Kathleen, in 1909. After a divorce, he married Alene Rollo on May 14, 1925.[2] The couple moved into 1616 Rodney Street, a building of four combined art studios and apartments, now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[3]

For financial reasons he began working for pulp magazines after the Crash of 1929. His illustrations appeared on the covers of Western Story, Complete Stories, Top-Notch, Sure-Fire Western, Super Western, and Western Trails. After 1938 he stopped publishing in the pulps, preferring portraits and historical subjects instead.[3]

gollark: Use `load` to give the webpage code its own environment.
gollark: Also probably `term` and a few browser functions for navigation and whatnot.
gollark: Yes, something like that/
gollark: You can just provide a very limited set of functions and not suffer from that.
gollark: PotatOS's sandbox has problems all over the place because it's complicated and exposes a lot of things because it needs CraftOS backward compatibility.

See also

Notes

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.