The last post was “Winter” by Eric Sloane, N.A., appropriate for the weather of that day. Today, we’re noticing the tulips and daffodils are tentatively pushing their way out of the soil. Temperatures here are expected to exceed 50 degrees today, so we thought we would post “Spring” this morning. We were fortunate to be able to purchase a small collection of pen and inks by the artist – we’ll try to post some this week. Enjoy the snow!
Category Archives: Illustrations by Eric Sloane
New Eric Sloane Pen and Ink Illustration
Winter is still with us at Weather Hill! Woke up to a little more than 6” of new snow. To celebrate, here is a very charming pen and ink illustration by Eric Sloane, N.A., new to the gallery. We were fortunate to be able to purchase a small collection of pen and inks by the artist – we’ll try to post some this week. Enjoy the snow!
Eric Sloane and the Army Air Corps
One of Eric Sloane’s illustrations for Your Body In Flight (T.O. # 00-25-13), prepared by the Aero Medical Laboratory of Wright Field, Dayton, Ohio), published by the Air Service Command, Patterson Field, Fairfield, Ohio for the United States Army Air Forces, July 20, 1943. Eric Sloane’s contribution to the training of pilots both informally just prior to the onset of WWII and formally as in this Army Air Forces manual, is often ignored. Eric Sloane contributed to two publications prior to the war that were used by civilian pilots as well as military recruits: Your Wings, by Assen Jordanoff (Funk and Wagnalls, May 1940) and Let’s Fly: An ABC of Flying by Earnest Vetter ( William Morrow and Company, 1940). Sloane also authored and illustrated his own Clouds, Air and Wind (The Devan-Adair Company, 1941). During the war, Eric Sloane wrote and illustrated Camouflage Simplified (The Devan-Adair Company, 1942), Gremlin Americanus, A Scrapbook Book Collection of Gremlins (B.F. Jay and Co., 1943). While the latter title was meant to be humorous, it was both quite an effective remainder of the dangers that faced pilots, as well as a probably much needed break from the military training manuals. During the war, Eric Sloane also contributed to Junior Aviation Science (by D.H. Grimm, Noble & Noble Publishers, 1942) and to at least one other publication for the Army Air Forces, Pilot’s Information File (1943, the Army Air Forces).
Photo from Wil Mauch’s Aware: A Retrospective of the Life and Work of Eric Sloane. Learn more about this most fascinating of American artists by visiting www.weatherhillfarm.com.
Learn more about how the Friends of the Eric Sloane Museum supports and promotes the legacy of Eric Sloane through a robust partnership with the Eric Sloane Museum by visiting us at www.friendsoftheericsloanemuseum.org.
Eric Sloane : Map of Newark Airport
For our flying enthusiast friends, a vintage map of Newark Airport by Eric Sloane. From the late 1930s to the late 1940s, Eric Sloane illustrated a number of different American airfields, airports, and seaplane bases in a comic style. Similar to the way F.W. Beers & Co. assured the success of their Victorian-era maps and atlases, Eric was sure to include the names of prominent individuals, families, and businesses associated with a particular airfield