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Saturday Evening Post cover
February 16, 1935
 

Coca-Cola advertising poster
 

landscape painting of PA countryside
 

advertising circular for Clover
 

watercolor

 

 

 

 

FAMILY

My whole family has given me so much encouragement over the years; I'm truly thankful. A particular inspiration to me has been the work of the illustrators in my family.
                                                                                  - Erin Pryor Gill

 

F. (Frederick) Sands Brunner

My maternal great-grandfather lived from 1886 - 1954, and worked during the "Golden Age" of Illustration. Fred grew up in Boyertown, Pennsylvania. He originally aspired to be trapper, as he loved the outdoors and wasn't particularly fond of school or office work. But after he drew a valentine for his teacher, and received a mark of '200', he began to study art. He graduated from the School of Industrial Art in Philadelphia, and studied at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts.

 

His paintings appeared on the cover of The Saturday Evening Post, in advertisements for Coca-Cola, Kellogg's cereal and Canada Dry Ginger Ale, on World War II Red Cross posters, and in many other similar publications. He often used his relatives as models to pose for his sketches (daughter Sybil appears on the Valentine Post cover).

 

In addition to his commercial illustration work, Fred also painted for his own enjoyment. Portraits of his wife and two daughters were some of his favorite subjects. He also continued to love the outdoors, and painted many landscapes in the Adirondack mountains of NY.

 

Sybil Lofland

Fred's daughter, my grandmother, was also an illustrator. With her father's encouragement, she attended Moore College of Art. There, despite disliking some of the repetitive drawing excerises the students were required to complete, she became quite accomplished at figure drawing.

 

Sybil married and had two daughters. When the oldest girl, my mother Janet, was in third grade, Sybil began to work full-time as an illustrator. She worked in the advertising departments of several Philadelphia department stores, including Gimbels, Lit's, and Clover, where her specialty was drawing children's fashions. Before full-color photos in advertising circulars were the norm, illustrators were very necessary to clearly depict sale items in black-and-white.

 

While she doesn't consider herself an artist, "only an illustrator," Sybil painted many colorful watercolors outside of her job. She most loved to paint her grandchildren, and fresh flower arrangements from her garden.

 

My grandmother passed away in May 2006, but until her death she was one of my biggest fans, who always cheered the completion of each new painting I made.

 

   
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