HOME
THE ARTIST
GALLERY
Collection Family Originals Portraits
NEWS
DVD
JBC ORDER

THE ARTIST

Joe Bowler in his studio


Biography

     Portraits have become the prime focus of Joe Bowler's career as an artist, which began when he was seventeen. Born in Forest Hills, New York in 1928 he began to draw when he was three. His first illustration for a national magazine was published by Cosmopolitan when he was nineteen working as an apprentice at the prestigious Charles E. Cooper Studios, Inc. There he had the opportunity to learn the craft from the finest artists in the profession who were generous in sharing their knowledge. He was elected to the Society of Illustrators in 1952 and to the Illustrators Hall of Fame in 1992.

     The Artists' Guild of New York named him their Artist of the Year in 1967. By this time, magazines were commissioning him to do portraits of well known people. These included a 1968 McCall's fashion article portraying eight presidential candidates' wives; the August 1971 issue of Ladies' Home Journal cover portrait of Rose Kennedy; The Saturday Evening Post cover of Julie and David Eisenhower.

     In 1972, seeking a milder climate, the Bowler family moved to Hilton Head Island, South Carolina. This proved to be the ideal location in which to make the transition from illustration to portraiture. Even with a lengthy portrait list, Joe takes time to paint just for himself, a part of the never-ending learning process which makes painting so rewarding.

     The Joe Bowler Collection is a family business involving Joe's wife Marilyn, and their daughters, Jolyn and Brynne.

     In 1998 Joe celebrated fifty years as an artist.

Update:     In 2008 Joe will celebrate sixty years as an artist

Top of Page

An Interview with The Artist

How did you get your start?

  • As an apprentice at Charles E. Cooper Studios in New York, I was inspired by the illustrations I saw being done by the top artists in the field. During the day, I did what I was asked to do, cleaning palettes and brushes, matting painting, running errands. I did my own work at night, sometime all night.

    After being there about 6 months, Coby Whitmore brought in an illustration for Cosmopolitan magazine, which I matted. He saw the sample I had done the night before and asked if he could take it with him to Cosmo to show the Art Director. Upon his return, he told me they had bought my sample and to bill them for $1,000. Earning $35 a week at that time, it seemed like a fortune to me.

    Within six months my illustrations were appearing, in three major magazines. Coby was my mentor in the early days of my career and we became life-long friends.

How do you begin a painting?

  • A few adult clients will give me the opportunity to paint from life, which I love to do. Occasionally, I am able to do my non-portrait work from life. However, most of my portraits and paintings begin with photographs. I plan the photo sessions carefully, thinking of the camera as a sketch tool. I love photos which turn me on to painting. The lighting, the values, the shapes I see in the camera are all important. My experiences in illustration are invaluable in this process.

    I prefer to use black and white prints so that the film does not impose its color on me. It is often necessary to combine elements from a number of different photos and to correct the drawing. Yes, photos do lie.

    Both Marilyn and Brynne are also able to take photographs which I like to use. Jolyn helps with photography of children. They seem to understand what I need.

    After selecting the photographs I want to use, I start working directly with the oil paints and large brushes, blocking in the shapes and values as quickly as possible. At the end of the first session, any viewer can get the feeling of what the finished painting will be like. After that, it is a matter of building and refining, putting paint and color down and reacting to it.

    Whether working from life or from photos, I begin by blocking in areas of value and color and bring the painting up throughout, without letting one area develop too far ahead of the whole. I see oil painting as an investigation, building with form rather than line. It requires destroying and rebuilding.

How do you approach portraiture?

  • The challenge of portraiture is creating a beautiful painting which anyone can enjoy, but that the client is thrilled to have. You must satisfy not only yourself as an artist, but the client who has commissioned the portrait. It is the challenge I really enjoy.

    On the first meeting with a subject, I try to remember the initial impression they project, their personality, their presence. This is important when interpreting the photographs which often have too much information in them.

With so many clients on your waiting list, why do you do non-portrait work?

  • It is difficult to be experimental with portraits, with the needs and the expectations of the clients in mind. Therefore, it is essential for my growth as an artist to seek inspiration from the great painters then incorporate things I have seen into my own work.

    In the early years, I would spend hours, even days at the Metropolitan Museum, searching every inch of the master painters' works. The guards would get nervous because I seemed to be licking the paint off the paintings. Now I use my art books and color plates in my extensive library for information and inspiration. I have been asked to will my library to an art institution. Hope I have quite a few more years to use it first.

Tell us about your use of color.

  • In theory, it's about as simple as you can get. It has to do with solid knowledge of the color wheel and complementary colors, plus the use of temperature changes from cools to warms to create volume, life, and light in a painting. A painter should know the color wheel like a guitarist knows the strings. By using this color theory I obtain vibrations of color that excite the eye.

How long does it take you to complete a painting?

  • When asked that question I say, "It could be a day, two weeks or a month . . . plus sixty years. All of my past experiences are put into each painting.

Top of Page

The Illustration Years

     In 1998, Joe celebrated fifty years as a professional artist. This in itself is a wonderful accomplishment. From illustration in the forties, fifties and sixties to portraiture in the seventies, eighties and nineties, he still paints every day. He continues to challenge himself not only as a portrait artist but with wonderful non-portrait, non-commissioned works which have been reproduced in the Joe Bowler Collection.

THE ILLUSTRATOR IN AMERICA
1860 - 2000

As some of you may know, Joe was hospitalized with polio at the age of 30. The first illustration he did during his recovery was for The Saturday Evening Post. That piece appears in the new edition of this history of American illustrators.

This book is available for purchase. If you would like more information about this history of the Society of Illustrators members, please go to the following web site:

Illustrator in America 1860 - 2000 New Expanded Edition

http://www.societyillustrators.org/museum_shop/in_america2.html

The Society of Illustrators
SI 100 Years
Founded February 1, 1901
SOCIETY OF ILLUSTRATORS
CENTENNIAL AUCTION
The Society of Illustrators in New York elected Joe to their Illustrator's Hall of Fame in 1992. The Society held an invitational show from June 10 to 20, 2001. For the first time, Joe offered illustrations from his personal collection to be sold.

Please visit the Society's web site at http://www.societyillustrators.org

HOME THE ARTIST GALLERY NEWS DVD JBC ORDER
CollectionFamilyOriginalsPortraits

Top of Page

Please note that all images on this web site are the sole property of the artist.
No reproduction of these images is allowed without the express written permission of the artist.
All rights reserved.© 1982 - 2007


Last modified on Saturday, October 20, 2007
page creation by
A Click Away
Jolyn L Bowler, Webmistress
webmistress@joebowler.com

web hosting by
Low Country Computer Services
LCCSWEB.COM