Some Beautiful Music Sheet Covers by Einar Nerman from made between 1912-1932 I love the simplicity of these many artist think detail is needed to make art pieces good but Nerman’s designs are examples of how less is more the strong simple character designs,simple one color backgrounds that blend into the characters and beautiful staging.
Parisian social life: French artist, Louis Legrand (1863-1951).
JC Leyendecker
title unknown, 1922
Edmond Kiraz, Jours de France
Gloriously Cartoony and Fun Covers by Cartoonist Roy Wilson(1900-1965) aside from the great cartoonish character designs and posing the colors to are also nice to look at there well balanced and very pleasing to the eye nothing feels to bright.
Sheet music, Let Us Waltz As We Say Goodbye, Harold Rossiter Music Co., 1925
I Love Lucy (1952) Designer: Gene Hazelton
1927 Three Bauhaus art students. From Art Deco, Avant Garde and Modernism, FB.
A Illustration by Abner Dean for Life Magazine for some articles over George Orwell’s Novel “1984”.I may be alone in this camp but personally I think Dean’s art style suits Orwell’s novel perfectly it’s cartoonish and has a slight unsettling feel to it just fits the vibe of the book perfectly I wish he illustrated the full novel he did a couple more illustrations for this article though.
'the triumph of neptune & thetis' bartholomaeus spranger / jacob matham
Panels of comic strip TEENA, by Hilda Terry (1914-2006). Terry was the first woman allowed to join the National Cartoonists Society.
So well-drawn: so lean and economical, elegant. The actions and emotions of the loose-limbed teens populating the comic are always clear and bright, their poses free from the stiff clichés usually seen in teen comics. These examples are all from the 1950s.