Freeman Elliot is best known for the three Artist's Sketch Pads
he illustrated for Brown and Bigelow from 1949 to 1951. Each page of
these twelve-page calendars had a primary pin-up figure surrounded by
several razor-crisp side sketches commenting in some way on the main
picture. The large pin-up was painted in gouache, Elliot's favourite
medium, the smaller sketches done in pencil.
Born in 1922 in a suburb of Chicago, Elliot apprenticed at the Stevens/Gross
studio, where he had the opportunity to learn from Gil Elvgren, Joyce
Ballantyne, Al Buell, and Haddon Sundblom. Shortly after serving in the
Navy in World War II, he was commissioned by Brown and Bigelow to create
two sets of double card decks: Winning Aces and Hit the Deck became
runaway best-sellers. In 1953, Elliot's work appeared on Brown and
Bigelow's successful Ballyhoo Calendar, along with that of Esquire
artists Al Moore, Ernest Chiriaka, Eddie Chan, and Ward Brackett.
Millions of Americans saw his pin-ups on the covers of Hearst's Pictorial
Weekly during the 1950s.
Though often amusing, his pin-ups could also be sexy and sensual. Elliot,
who was represented by Stevens/Gross, had a cross-over career that
encompassed front covers for national magazines, story illustrations,
and advertising art.
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