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Paul Degen

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Nationality
  
Swiss

Name
  
Paul Degen

Education
  
Academie Julian


Paul Degen The Pictorial Arts New York New York

Born
  
March 24, 1941 (
1941-03-24
)

Awards
  
Basel Innovation Prize, 1992

Died
  
May 30, 2007, Basel, Switzerland

Paul Degen (24 March 1941 – 30 May 2007) was a Swiss illustrator, caricaturist, painter and sculptor. He is mostly known for the cartoons he did for The New York Times and his 34 title illustrations for The New Yorker magazine in the 1970s and 1980s. In 1992 he was awarded the Basel Innovation Prize for inventing the "ROMA birth wheel."

Contents

Paul Degen Attempted Bloggery Street Scene Paul Degen Preliminary

Early life and education

Paul Degen Paul Degen Works on Sale at Auction amp Biography Invaluable

Paul Degen was born on 24 March 1941 in Basel, Switzerland. After his education as a lithographor at the Wassermann Ag in Basel and graduation from the Kunstschule Basel (Basel College of Commercial Art), Degen continued his education at the graphic design studio of Theo Ballmer and at the Académie Julian in Paris.

Career

Paul Degen Attempted Bloggery Street Scene Paul Degen Preliminary

In the 1960s Degen worked as a freelance graphic designer and illustrator with Herbert Leupin, Celestino Piatti, and Fritz Bühler at the Atelier Eidenbenz in Switzerland.

Paul Degen Attempted Bloggery Figure Skating Paul Degen Proposed

In 1970 he moved to New York and worked, besides freelancing as a cartoonist and illustrator for The New York Times, Esquire, Harper's Magazine and The Atlantic Monthly, at the Push Pin Studios with Milton Glaser and Seymour Chwast.

Paul Degen mpmizinetimages3subroute2gif

After living in Brasil, Peru, Hawaii, Bali, and his return to New York at the end of 1988, Degen moved back to Liestal near Basel in 1990.

ROMA Birth Wheel

Paul Degen The New Yorker Cover November 12 1990 Poster Print by

In the mid-1980s, while hospitalized for a spinal disc herniation, Degan suffered from chronic constipation and the helplessness of being forced to lie on his back. Obsessing about the desire to be upright and hold onto something, he realized that women in labor must have the same desires. While still bedridden, Degan produced initial drawings which six years later led to the first ROMA Birth Wheel. The device allows women in labor to achieve an upright, natural position for delivery of the child.

Death

Paul Degen Attempted Bloggery Paul Degen39s WellDressed Dogs

Paul Degen died on May 30, 2007, in Basel following an operation.

Exhibitions

Paul Degen THE EMPEROR39S NEW CLOTHES by Hans Christian Anderson

  • Architecture for Children (1000 boxes), Hudson River Museum, New York
  • 34 American Architects Travelling Exhibit - Rome, Venice, Milan, Bologna and the United States
  • 1979 - Gallerie Commercio, Zurich
  • 1979/81 - Hotel Engel, Liestal
  • 1981 - Susumo Gallery, Sydney
  • 1985 - Hotel Engel, Liestal
  • 2006 - HP-GARCIA Gallery, Hell´s Kitchen/ New York
  • Book illustrations

    Paul Degen The Vintage Poster Paul Degen Puerto Rico American

  • The Emperor's New Clothes, Hans Christian Andersen, Random House (1978), ISBN 0-394-83840-8
  • O Thou Improper Thou Uncommun Noun, Clarkson N Potter Inc, NY (1978), ISBN 0-517-53511-4
  • David Copperfield, Charles Dickens, Franklin Library (1980), ASIN: B000BWRFP0
  • References

    Paul Degen Wikipedia