Cover Gallery: Celebrating America

These Post covers and illustrations honor the land of the free and the home of the brave.

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These Post covers and illustrations honor the land of the free and the home of the brave. Happy Independence Day!

Cover
Colonial Man Selling The Saturday Evening Post Door to Door
George Gibbs
January 27, 1900

George Gibbs painted over 40 covers for the Post during the first decade of the 20th century. He was a competent illustrator who could depict romanticized historical scenes and subjects to the taste of editor George Horace Lorimer.

Cover
Fourth of July, 1905
Walter H. Everett
July 1, 1905

Walter H. Everett created covers for the Post during a time when war dominated the magazine. Many of his covers feature soldiers and pirates and occasionally a beautiful woman.

Cover
Fourth of July, 1906
Guernsey Moore
June 30, 1906

Guernsey Moore illustrated the first colored cover for the Saturday Evening Post. In 1900, he illustrated new lettering for the Post’s masthead and in 1904 became the art editor of the magazine.

Cover
Civil War Veterans
J.C. Leyendecker
May 24, 1913

J.C. Leyendecker was only one of the four major artists from the first decade to continue illustrating Post covers after 1910. Over the course of the next decade, Leyendecker painted well over 100 covers for the magazine, including these patriotic Civil War veterans in 1913.

Cover
Colonial Drummer
J.C. Leyendecker
July 6, 1918

For several years, war influenced the covers of the Saturday Evening Post, and many were painted by J.C. Leyendecker. This 1918 cover of a colonial drummer was painted by Leyendecker despite his anti-war views, which he got to express with his famous New Year’s babies.

Cover
Independence Day
J.C. Leyendecker
July 5, 1919

J.C. Leyendecker experimented with a variety of subjects and attitudes, but his most noteworthy work marked and celebrated America’s holidays. He painted covers for several holidays from 1910-1919 and some, like the Fourth of July and the New Year, belonged to him almost exclusively.

Cover
Female Continental Soldier
Ellen Pyle
July 1, 1922

This 1922 cover was created by one of the Post’s most well-known female artists, Ellen Pyle. Known for painting children and beautiful young women with a goal of capturing the “unaffected natural American type,” Pyle’s four children became models in most of her covers.

Cover
The Goddess and Pvt. Gallagher C
Norman Rockwell
October 11, 1941

This Norman Rockwell Statue of Liberty is part of a more detailed illustration with Lady Liberty shooting from the sky like a meteor as onlookers watch from below.

Cover
Old Glory
John Clymer
July 4, 1942

John Clymer created 80 Saturday Evening Post covers from 1942-1962. He often painted patriotic scenes covering vast landscapes, making this close-up of the American flag something unique.

Cover
Independence Hall, Philadelphia, PA
Allen Saalburg
June 2, 1945

In 1945, Independence Hall was just across the way from the Post offices, and, more than any other structure, it is a symbol of American perseverance and love of liberty. Saalburg’s painting is a view of Independence Hall looking west. The building at the left is The American Philosophical Society. The Post‘s offices were directly behind the trees in the left foreground.

Cover
Family Portrait on the Fourth
John Falter
July 5, 1952

John Falter painted more than 120 covers for the Post. He loved to illustrate Midwestern Americana, which he perfectly captures in this idealized family reunion scene. After the Post started using photographs rather that illustrations on its covers, Falter turned to portrait painting and book illustration. Many of those had a patriotic bent as well: he illustrated a special edition of Carl Sandburg’s Abraham Lincoln – The Prairie Years and Houghton-Mifflin’s Mark Twain series.

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Comments

  1. I was brought to become an artist also and never could I ever forget the great & beautiful art of Mr. Norman Rockwell.He is & forever will always be an all American Artistic ICON in my book.

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