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George Wolfe Plank

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Name
  
George Plank

George Wolfe Plank Niamhmakesthings Fashion Illustration George Wolfe Plank
Died
  
1965, Mayfield and Five Ashes, United Kingdom

George Wolfe Plank (1883–1965) was an American artist illustrator, chiefly remembered for his long-term association with Vogue Magazine, which resulted in years of covers in an Art Deco style related to that of Helen Dryden and influenced, by among others, Edmund Dulac.

George Wolfe Plank now feral

Style Plank's work has been compared with such artists as Rackham, Dulac, Alphonse Mucha and even Gustav Klimt. His work is characterized by broad fields of bright colour setting off the mass and line of his principal figures. His composition is clear and simple, the wealth of sartorial detail notwithstanding. Plank broke onto the Vogue scene with his mature style almost completely established and worked for some years with no real rivals before Helen Dryden's work matured and she became one of the most important of his colleagues. William Packer described Plank's concept of fashion as "ideal, bizarre and improbable, at once adventurous and yet romantic and nostalgic".

George Wolfe Plank Niamhmakesthings Fashion Illustration George Wolfe Plank

George Wolfe Plank Niamhmakesthings Fashion Illustration George Wolfe Plank
George Wolfe Plank httpssmediacacheak0pinimgcom236x502d65
George Wolfe Plank George Wolfe Plank Vogue May cover
George Wolfe Plank Vogue Cover December 1913 Poster Print by George Wolfe
George Wolfe Plank George Plank Vogue magazine cover November 1917
George Wolfe Plank Vogue Cover November 1915 Poster Print by George Wolfe

References

George Wolfe Plank Wikipedia


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