Guys and Molls
Bold, garish and steamy cover images from popular pulp-fiction magazines of the 1930s and '40s have made their way from newsstands to museum walls
- By Doug Stewart
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2003, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 3)
Few people then imagined original pulp art was worth keeping, let alone exhibiting. Once a cover painting was photographed by the printer, it was put in storage or, more likely, thrown out. The artists themselves rarely saved their work. When Condé Nast bought former pulp publisher Street & Smith in 1961, the new owners put a trove of original pulp paintings (including, it seems, some unsigned works by N. C. Wyeth) out on Madison Avenue with the trash.
“This is a genre of American representational art that has been almost completely destroyed,” says Lesser. “Out of 50,000 or 60,000 cover paintings, there are only about 700 today that I can account for.” If pulp paintings hadn’t been so inherently offensive, they might have fared better. “But people didn’t want their mother-in-law to see one of these paintings hanging over their new living room sofa,” Lesser says. “This is objectionable art. It’s racist, sexist and politically incorrect.” But since he has neither a sofa nor a mother-in-law, Lesser has crammed his own two-room apartment to impassability with pulp paintings, along with toy robots and monster-movie figures. Pulp art’s scarcity, of course, is part of what makes it so collectible today. An original cover painting by Frank R. Paul or Virgil Finlay, for instance, can fetch $70,000 or more at auction.
Lesser is the proud owner of the woman-in-a-meat-locker painting by H. J. Ward that so infuriated Mayor La Guardia. Although it’s included in the Brooklyn exhibition, the museum isn’t expecting any public outcry, says Kevin Stayton, the BrooklynMuseum’s curator of decorative arts.
“Although this art may have pushed the edge of what was acceptable, it’s fairly tame by today’s standards,” Stayton explains. “Things that were troubling to the public 60 years ago, like scantily clad women, don’t really bother us anymore, while things that didn’t raise an eyebrow then, like the stereotyping of Asians as evil, cause us tremendous discomfort now.”
Contemporary British figurative artist Lucian Freud once wrote, “What do I ask of a painting? I ask it to astonish, disturb, seduce, convince.” For those with similar demands, pulp art delivers a satisfying kick. People can debate the aesthetic merits of these overwrought, disquieting, sometimes gruesome works of art, but no one can dispute their creators’ mastery of the paintbrush as a blunt instrument.
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Comments (2)
I have two original paintings done by my fATHER and artist, Don Frache, that were used as a cover page for pulp fiction magazine in the late 40s. One was for True Romance the other is a pirate. I can't seem to find a picture of the magazine they were used on. I'm thinking about selling the pirate painting and was wondering if you know who might be interested or how to go about it. Thankyou
Posted by Pam Kaupp on November 21,2012 | 12:02 PM
I read the article and saw the exhibit in Brooklyn. Both are well done except for one horrendous oversight: Margaret Brundage, The Queen of The Pulps was excluded! Unbelievable. She is one of the most popular, most intriguing and collectable pulp artists of all. Even her non-Weird Tales Golden Fleece pulp cover sold at Heritage Auctions, New York in 2011 for $7170. From New York Times article: Exhibition Recalls Slam-Bang World of Pulp Magazines By George Gene Gustines Published: March 14, 2012 Margaret Brundage was one of the few female illustrators in the pulp industry; the show notes that her depictions, in publications like “Weird Tales,” were at least as risqué as those of her male counterparts. “The term ‘objectifying women’ wouldn’t have existed at the time, but she topped what many of the men were doing,” — New York Times Brundage finally has a revealing monograph coming out soon: The Alluring Art of Margaret Brundage
Posted by J. David Spurlock on October 7,2012 | 11:46 PM