Russell Patterson

Russell Patterson
Russell Patterson
arrives in Hollywood in 1937 for the filming of Artists and Models.
BornDecember 26, 1893
Omaha, Nebraska
DiedMarch 17, 1977(1977-03-17) (aged 83)
Atlantic City, New Jersey
NationalityAmerican
Area(s)Illustrator, costumer and scenic designer, cartoonist
Notable works
Life covers,
scenic designs for Paramount's film Give Me a Sailor (1938)
Mamie comic strip.
AwardsNational Cartoonists Society Advertising and Illustration Award (1957)
Elzie Segar Award (1974)

Russell Patterson (December 26, 1893 – March 17, 1977) was an American cartoonist, illustrator and scenic designer. Patterson's art deco magazine illustrations helped develop and promote the idea of the 1920s and 1930s fashion style known as the flapper.

Russell H. Patterson was born in Omaha, Nebraska. Although he claimed he knew at age 17 that he wanted to be a magazine cover artist, he took a circuitous route to his ultimate success in that field. His family left his hometown of Omaha and settled in Montreal when he was still a boy. He studied architecture briefly at McGill University, then became an undistinguished cartoonist for some newspapers in Montreal, contributing Pierre et Pierrette to La Patrie. Rejected by the Canadian army at the start of World War I, he moved to Chicago to become a catalog illustrator. His early career included interior design for department stores like Carson Pirie Scott & Company and Marshall Field's.

A trip to Paris gave him the opportunity to paint and attend life-drawing classes. However, it also left him in debt, and so he reluctantly returned to the dull work of advertising art in Chicago.

From 1916 to 1919, he intermittently attended the Art Institute of Chicago. From 1922 to 1925, Patterson, as Charles N. Landon had done before, distributed a mail-order art instruction course. Consisting of 20 lessons, it was called "The Last Word in Humorous Illustrations." Despite the finality suggested by that title, he afterwards contributed to the instruction books of the Art Instruction Schools.

In 1924, Patterson made an attempt to carve out a living as a fine artist. Traveling to the Southwest with his paintings, however, he found the art galleries indifferent to his work.[1][2]

  1. ^ Top Hats and Flappers: The Art of Russell Patterson (Fantagraphics, 2006), edited by Shane Glines and Alex Chun. Foreword by Armando Mendez.
  2. ^ Bell, John. Invaders from the North: How Canada Conquered the Comic Book Universe, Dundurn Press Ltd., 2006 ISBN 1-55002-659-3, ISBN 978-1-55002-659-7, pp. 26–27