Joseph Clement Coll | |
|---|---|
| Born | (1881-07-02)July 2, 1881[1] |
| Died | October 19, 1921(1921-10-19) (aged 40)[1] |
| Known for | Pen and inkillustration |
Joseph Clement Coll (July 2, 1881 – October 19, 1921) was an American book and newspaperillustrator. He was known for hispen and ink story illustrations that were used to illustrate adventure stories such as Conan Doyle'sSir Nigel.[2]
Joseph Clement Coll was born on July 2, 1881, inPhiladelphia to an Irish immigrant family.[3][4] Both his father and his brothers worked as book binders. As a child, Coll read many illustrated books and magazines. He graduatedCentral High School, where he took basic art courses, and started work without any academic art training.[3][4]
Joseph Clement Coll began his professional career working for theNew York American as a newspaper artist apprentice at age 17.[5] At this time, his position would be similar to a modern-day news photographer, as his job was to illustrate current events each day within the daily deadline. That same year, he moved toChicago temporarily. In 1901, he came back to Philadelphia to work onThe North American and soon drew the eye of his editor,J. Thomson Willing, who sent him on special missions to procure his skill.[5] The two remained friends even after Coll stopped doing newspaper illustrations.[5] He was soon working for magazines such asCollier's,Everybody's and theAmerican Sunday Magazine. Coll's reputation stands mainly on his pen & ink story illustrations.
In contrast to most illustrators who worked in pen & ink, Coll achieved true tonal gradations in his illustrations by using pen strokes to build up a complete range of values. He was influenced by the Spanish pen & ink artistDaniel Vierge. According toWalt Reed, Coll's "technical virtuosity nor the romantic fantasy of his point of view has ever been rivaled".[5]
Coll was also a painter and he often did paintings for the cover or frontispiece of books which were reproduced in color and then pen & inks to illustrate the text. He was considered an ideal illustrator for authors such asArthur Conan Doyle and other adventure writers.[6] His illustrations for books such asTalbot Mundy'sKing of the Khyber Rifles andSax Rohmer'sThe Insidious Dr. Fu Manchu were widely reprinted for many years. Coll died in 1921 ofappendicitis, aged 40.[5]
Before Coll started an illustration, he would contemplate on the design of the composition for a long while, which allowed him to draw without a model.[5] Later in his career, when he was able to use a model, he would draw a shaded image of the model with pencils ontracing paper, after which he would darken the backs of the tracing paper and retrace ontobristol board orillustration board.[7] He would do the same earlier in his career but used his inner vision instead of model. He then would start the final ink drawing, for which he usedfountain pens.[7]