""Help Deliver The Goods""   Lot no. 401

Add to Want List


By Herbert Andrew Paus (American- 1880-1946)

1915 (Estimated)
40.00" x 28.00"
Linen Poster
Signed Lower Left

REQUEST PRICE


PURCHASE REQUEST

Click any of the images above for additional views.



This "Help Deliver The Goods" illustration was used for a poster trying to recruit American's to the US Navy During World War I. 



Explore related art collections: Poster Illustrations / Men / Military/Soldiers / Advertisements / $100 - $5,000 / Newly Researched

See all original artwork by Herbert Andrew Paus

ABOUT THE ARTIST

 

Herbert Paus was a native of Minneapolis and got his first job as a cartoonist for the St. Paul Pioneer Press. Ambitious to become an illustrator, he enrolled in the Fine Arts School there, and later found employment in a Chicago art studio.

   Eventually, he moved to New York where he became a freelance illustrator. Paus had a strong sense of design, which was ideally suited to posters. He was a member of the Government’s committee on pictorial publicity during World War I, and painted many effective posters to support the war effort. This approach, combined with a striking use of vivid color, was carried over into his magazine illustrations and cover designs for such magazines as Woman’s Home Companion, American Magazine, The Youth’s Companion, and Collier’s.

   Among his many outstanding book illustrations were those for Maurice Maeterlinck’s play “Betrothal” as told for children entitled Tyltyl.

   Paus also painted for such advertisers as Hart, Schaffner & Marx, Goodyear, General Motors, Certain-teed, and Victor Records, and from 1927 to 1931, was under exclusive contract to do all of the spectacular covers for Popular Science Monthly.