Showing posts with label Illustrator. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illustrator. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 26, 2024

Graphics: The Chinese Depicted by George Frederick Keller in Thistleton’s Illustrated Jolly Giant

Illustrations by George Frederick Keller








ABOUT THE ARTIST

George Frederick Keller was born around 1846 in Prussia according to the 1870 United States Census. His occupation was lithographer. It’s not known when he immigrated to the United States. During the Civil War he served in the Grand Army of the Republic (GAR). Military records at Ancestry.com and fold3.com have one person who matches the description. 

The New York Civil War Muster Roll (at Ancestry) had an eighteen-year-old Frederick Keller, a lithographer born in Germany. On September 7, 1864, Keller enlisted at Brooklyn, New York. He was described as five feet tall, gray eyes, brown hair and fair complexion. Private Keller was assigned to Company A of the 46th Infantry Regiment also known as the Fremont Rifle regiment. On June 3, 1865, Keller was mustered out at the Delaney House in Washington, DC.

Ancestry.com transcription

Sometime after the war Keller moved to California. He was not listed in the 1868 San Francisco directory. The 1869 San Francisco directory said Keller was a draftsman with George H. Baker, a lithographer at 408 California Street. Keller and Baker resided at 915 Powell Street. 


The 1870 census counted twenty-four year-old Keller (line 8) in Baker’s household. Baker was on the last line of the previous sheet.

Baker on line 40

Keller on line 8

The 1871 San Francisco directory listed Keller at 410 Pacific Street. He was a draftsman with Baker. 

In 1872, George F. Keller & Co., lithographers, was located at 113 Leidesdorff Street. 


Keller returned to Baker in the 1873 directory. 

Beginning in 1874, Keller applied his artistic talent at publisher George Thistleton’s publication, Thistleton’s Illustrated Jolly Giant. Keller’s address was 913 Montgomery Street. Thistleton’s office was at 608 Market Street.

August 22, 1874

Their association continued into 1875. Keller worked in the publisher’s office at 423 Washington Street. 

Keller was not listed in the 1876 directory. In 1877 Keller, an artist at The Wasp, resided at 1101 Broadway, and also listed in the section for portrait and landscape painters

The 1878 directory also had two listings: 

1. Frederick Keller, 622 Hayes, lithographer with F. Korbel & Bros. [cigar box manufacturers and lithographers]
2. George F Keller, artist, The Wasp

Keller’s illustrations appeared in The Wasp through 1883. Over the years his address changed: 5 Burritt Street (1879), 3 Latham Street (1880), 435 Fifth Street (1881–1882), and 603 Hyde Street (1883). 

Self-Portraits

According to the 1880 census, Keller (line 43), his wife Lana, and two California-born daughters, Laura and Rosa, lived in San Francisco at 435 Fifth Street. The census said he was born in Bavaria and editor of The Wasp


The Wasp, March 26, 1881, said 
Several of our readers having gotten the impression that Mr. Frederick Keller is no longer connected with the Wasp, we desire to state that such is not the case. As will be seen by our present issue Mr. Keller, after a brief rest, continues in the artistic labors which have won wide fame for him in the past and are destined to win him still more in the future.
The Wasp, March 24, 1882, said 
Our regular artist, who has for some two weeks been too ill to work, and whose place has been so admirably supplied by Mr. Jules Tavernier, has recovered his health, and some of his characteristic work appears in this issue of the paper. This will be noted with lively gratification by large classes of our readers to whom the talent and sincerity of Mr. Keller the artist have endeared Mr. Keller the man. Even the spirited designs and faultless color-sense of so great a painter as Mr. Tavernier could hardly reconcile them to the loss of Mr. Keller’s work, with its wonderful mastery of lithographic methods and effects—an art in itself.
Keller was not listed in San Francisco directories after 1883. (see 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, and 1888.) Reduced Xerox of the Original Text of Historic Lithographs of San Francisco (1980) said Keller died in mid-1883. If that was true, it’s odd that The Wasp did not publish an obituary. It’s not clear what became of him. 

Keller may have moved to another city. The Tennessee Virtual Archive has a print by Keller who depicted the Andersonville Prison which was printed by the Shober & Carqueville Lithographing Company in Chicago. “G. F Keller, G. A. R.” is in the lower left corner of the illustration. The print has a March 1884 copyright and also viewable at Wikimedia Commons.

The 1888 Lakeview, Illinois, city directory had a listing for “George F Keller” at 1236 George. He was an artist at Goos & Quensel. The 1889 directory (below) had the same address but a different occupation, lithographer. 


The 1890 Lakeside Annual Directory of Chicago listed Keller as an artist at 1236 George. He was a lithographer, at the same address, in the 1891 listings. 


A lithographer named “George F Keller” passed away on March 2, 1895 in Chicago. He was laid to rest at Graceland Cemetery

Ancestry.com transcription

The whereabouts of Keller’s family are not known. 

There was a somewhat similar Keller in New York City. 

Engraver—Steel
Keller, George F. 82 Nassau

Printers—Card
Keller, George F. 82 Nassau
The 1898 directory listing was 
Printers—Plate
Keller, George F. 82 Nassau
However, an obituary in New York has not been found.


A verified date and place of Keller’s passing has not been found.

Keller’s illustrations in The Wasp, from 1876 to 1880, will appear every Wednesday during July. 


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Wednesday, October 11, 2023

A Few Details About Ed Young, Artist, Illustrator and Caldecott Medal Recipient


Ed Aite Young was born on November 28, 1931, in Tianjin (also known as Tientsin), China. The birth information is from Major Authors and Illustrators for Children and Young Adults, Volume 6 (1993). When Young was naturalized on March 28, 1966, his middle name was recorded on a number of naturalization documents.


Young’s parents were Qua-ling Young (1891–19971) and Yuen Tang (or Sai Yun Tang, 1904–2008). A family tree at Ancestry.com, said Young’s family moved in 1934 from Tianjin to Shanghai. In 1949 the Communist takeover of Shanghai caused the family to move to Hong Kong.

On November 24, 1951, four days before his 20th birthday, Young (line 12) was aboard the steamship President Cleveland when it departed from Hong Kong. He arrived at the port of San Francisco, California on December 11, 1951. 


The family tree said he spent several weeks with the family of Z.P. Tang. 

Young’s education began at City College of San Francisco in 1952. He transferred to the University of Illinois where he studied architecture from 1952 to 1954. At Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles, California, Young earned a Bachelor of Professional Arts in 1957. Later that year he moved to New York City. Young did graduate study at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York, from 1958 to 1959. He was an instructor in visual communication at Pratt from 1960 to 1966. 

From 1957 to 1962, Young was an illustrator and designer at the Mel Richman Studio in Manhattan. He left the studio to pursue freelance work. Young illustrated Janice M. Udry’s The Mean Mouse and Other Mean Stories (“The Mean Party”, “The Mean Rabbit”, “The Mean Dwarf”, “The Mean Blackbird”, “The Mean Horse”, “The Mean Mouse”, “The Mean Tiger”, “The Mean Dragon”, “The Mean Troll”, “The Mean Giant”, “The Mean Witch”) which was published by Harper in 1962. The Mean Mouse was recognized by the American Institute of Graphics Arts

The first of nearly 100 books.

In Chinatown, Young studied tai chi with Cheng Man-ch’ing in 1961.

In 1962, Young and Mary McLaughlin obtained, in Manhattan, marriage license number 5962. The family tree said the marriage date was on April 7. They divorced in 1969. Young and Natasha Gorky were married in Westminster, London in June 1971 according to the family tree. In 1985 Young married Filomena Tuosto (1952–2007). 

Young used the pseudonym Yang Zhr Cheng on the 1988 book, China’s Long March: 6,000 Miles of Danger. (Maps drawn by Jeanyee Wong.) 


Young won the 1990 Caldecott Medal for Lon Po Po. Art from the book appeared on the 1991 Caldecott Calendar cover, artist page and month of July.




Young passed away on September 29, 2023, at his home in Hastings-on-Hudson, New York. 


Further Reading and Viewing
Library of Congress, Ed Young video

Jane Yolen
Pictures by Ed Young
Putnam, 1967

Kermit Krueger
Pictures by Ed Young
World Publishing Company, 1969

Mel Evans
Watercolors by Ed Young
Doubleday, 1969

Diane Wolkstein
Illustrated by Ed Young
Doubleday, 1972

Feenie Ziner
Illustrated by Ed Young
Doubleday, 1977

Diane Wolkstein
Illustrated by Ed Young
Thomas Y. Crowell, 1977

Ed Young with Hilary Beckett
Illustrated by Ed Young
Collins + World, 1978

Ed Young
Collins, 1978

Pictures by Ed Young
Doubleday, 1979

Diane Wolkstein
Illustrated by Ed Young
Thomas Y. Crowell, 1979

Ed Young
Collins + World, 1980

Priscilla Jaquith
Drawings by Ed Young
Philomel Books, 1981

Ai-Ling Louie
Illustrated by Ed Young
Philomel Books, 1982

Jean Fritz
Illustrations by Ed Young
Putnam, 1983

Ed Young
Harper & Row, 1984

Margaret Leaf
Illustrated by Ed Young
Lothrop, Lee & Shepard Books, 1987

James Howe
Illustrated by Ed Young 
Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1987

Tony Johnston
Illustrated by Ed Young
G.P. Putnam’s Sons, 1987
Calligraphy by Jeanyee Wong

Howard Norman
Art by Ed Young
Joy Street Books, 1987

Robert Frost
Illustrated by Ed Young
Henry Holt, 1988

Nancy Larrick
Drawings by Ed Young
Philomel Books, 1988

Jean Fritz
Illustrated by Yang Zhr Cheng [Ed Young]
Maps by Jeanyee Wong
Putnam, 1988

Richard Lewis
Illustrated by Ed Young
Atheneum, 1988

Phyllis Root
Art by Ed Young
Henry Holt, 1988

Ruth Yaffe Radin
Illustrated by Ed Young
Macmillan, 1989

Ed Young
Philomel Books, 1989

Illustrated by Ed Young
Simon and Schuster, 1989

Lafcadio Hearn, Margaret Hodges
Illustrated by Ed Young
Calligraphy by Jeanyee Wong
Little, Brown, 1989

Richard Lewis
Art by Ed Young 
Atheneum, 1991

Nancy White Carlstrom
Illustrated by Ed Young
Philomel Books, 1991

Audrey Osofsky
Illustrated by Ed Young
Orchard Books, 1992

Barbara Savadge Horton
Illustrated by Ed Young
Knopf, 1992

Mary Calhoun
Art by Ed Young 
Morrow Junior Books, 1992

Laura Krauss Melmed
Illustrated by Ed Young
Lothrop, Lee & Shepard, 1993

Adapted and illustrated by Ed Young
HarperCollins, 1993

Ed Young
Philomel Books, 1993

Eleanor Coerr
Illustrated by Ed Young
Putnam, 1993

Ed Young 
Philomel Books, 1994

Ed Young
Henry Holt, 1995

Ed Young
Philomel Books, 1995

Penny Pollock
Illustrated by Ed Young
Little, Brown, 1995

Art by Ed Young
Laura Geringer Book, 1997

Ed Young
Silver Whistle, 1997

Ed Young
Harcourt Brace, 1998

Tony Johnston
Illustrated by Ed Young
Sierra Club Books for Children, 2000

Ed Young
HarperCollins Publishers, 2001

Ed Young
Puffin Books, 2002

Ed Young
Philomel Books, 2002

Ed Young
Philomel Books, 2004

Ed Young
Atheneum Books, 2004

Andrea Cheng
Drawings by Ed Young
Lee & Low Books, 2005

Ed Young
Philomel Books, 2006

Dennis Haseley
Illustrated by Ed Young
Roaring Brook Press, 2008

Brenda Z. Guiberson
Illustrated by Ed Young 
Henry Holt, 2010

Ed Young
Little, Brown and Co., 2011

Ashley Ramsden
Illustrations by Ed Young
Roaring Brook Press, 2011

Barbara DaCosta
Art by Ed Young
Little, Brown, 2012

Ed Young
Little, Brown and Company, 2015

Ed Young
Philomel Books, 2016


Wednesday, September 27, 2023

A Few Details About Greg Jein, Pop Culture and Baseball Fan, Collector, Conventioneer, Miniature Modelmaker, and Academy Award Nominee

Greg Jein’s collection of mostly science fiction models, props and costumes will be auctioned on October 14 and 15 at Heritage Auctions. Included are photographic items from The Green Hornet with Bruce Lee; Wah Chang’s Star Trek Tricorder and Salt Vampire creature hand; and photographs of Irene Tsu. The New York Times, September 16, 2023, highlighted some of the auction items. (On October 15 the Star Wars X-Wing fighter model sold for $3.1 million.)


Jein was born on October 31, 1945 in Los Angeles, California. In the 1950 United States Census, Jein (line 28) was the only child of Joseph and Annie who married on January 10, 1944. The California Marriage Record at Ancestry.com said his mother’s name, at the time, was Chuey L. Lee. Also in the household was Jein’s paternal grandfather, Chee Sing Jein also known as Jein Lun Lane. In Chinese American Names: Tradition and Transition (1998), Emma Woo Louie said 
... Joseph Jein, who grew up in Santa Barbara, California, recalled that his father adopted this spelling after becoming a Christian—the family name was originally spelled Gin (甄). This surname is also Americanized as Gene, Ginn, and Jean. ...
In Jade: An Asian American Magazine, Winter 1982, Volume 4, Number 4, Jein said
Because of the way my name is spelled, most people think I’m German. My last name derives from Gin, but after my grandfather became a Christian, he thought it sounded too much like the alcohol, so he changed it.

Jein attended Audubon Junior High, Dorsey High School and Los Angeles State College (California State University, Los Angeles). 

 1962 Circle, Dorsey High School yearbook;
yearbook staff had Jein and others on sports


In an interview at StarTrek,  Jein mentioned collecting television memorabilia in 1966 and attending a convention organized by Bjo Trimble

Jein was a Star Trek fan. His drawing of a Klingon warbird was featured on the cover of Inside Star Trek 2, August 1968. 


Jein contributed illustrations to ten issues of T-Negative: #3, September 1969; #4, December 1969; #5, February 1970; #6, April 1970; #8, August 1970; #12, October 1971; #13, December 1971; #15, May 1972; #19, February 1973; #23, July 1974. His article, “The Case of Jonathan Doe Starship”, was published in #27, April 1975. 

T-Negative 5, February 1970

T-Negative 6, April 1970

According to Close Encounters of the Third Kind: The Making of Steven Spielberg’s Classic Film (2007), Jein “earned a degree in fine arts from the Los Angeles State College of Applied Arts and Sciences”. Cinefex #2, August 1980, profiled Jein and explained how he got into film special effects. At Los Angeles State College, Jein “learned the tedious and frequently uncomfortable skill of fiberglassing”. Mastering this process helped him get work at a small effects outfit in Santa Monica. The project involved creating fiberglass props for the “Chicken of the Sea” show at San Diego’s Sea World. Jein worked with Bill Hedge who offered him a chance to work a pornographic parody of Flash Gordon. Jein accepted and met Dennis Muren, Jim Danforth, Rick Baker, and Doug Beswick who were working on Flesh Gordon.

Jein’s earliest film credits were the 1974 films Flesh Gordon (effects technician and special miniature constructor) and Dark Star (special effects). His film and television work include Close Encounters of the Third Kind (1977); Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979); 1941 (1979); The Hunt for Red October (1990); V (1983); Star Trek: The Next Generation (1987–1994); Fantastic Four (2005); Avatar (2009); Oblivion (2013); Interstellar (2014); and Mulan (2020). The starship USS Gregory Jein appeared in Star Trek: Picard.

Jein shared Academy Award visual effects nominations on Close Encounters of the Third Kind with Roy Arbogast, Douglas Trumbull, Matthew Yuricich and Richard Yuricich, and 1941 with William A. Fraker and A.D. Flowers. 

Jein was a guest at the 1984 San Diego Comic-Con.

Souvenir Program Book

Jein can be found in many publications at the Internet Archive as Greg Jein and Gregory Jein

Star Trek The Next Generation
Behind the Scenes card #26, 1993

Public records at Ancestry.com said Jein resided at 3770 Cherrywood Avenue in Los Angeles. 

Jein passed away on May 22, 2022 in Los Angeles. The Hollywood Reporter, June 29, 2022, published an obituary. 

Further Reading and Viewing
Fansided, Truths about Greg Jein from the friends who knew him best 
Memory Alpha, Gregory Jein
StarTrek, Remembering Gregory Jein, 1945–2022
National Public Radio, ‘Star Wars’ Red Leader X-wing model heads a cargo bay’s worth of props at auction

A Few Details About Greg Jein’s Family History

Greg’s roots are in “Toy-shan, Kwangtung, China” (Taishan, Guangdong, China), where his paternal grandfather, Jein Chee Sing aka Jein Lun Lane, was born on August 22, 1862 according to his Petition for Naturalization application (at Ancestry.com) which was signed on May 2, 1956. On June 8, 1956 in Los Angeles, he was naturalized as Lun Lane Jein.   



The application said his lawful admission for permanent residence was at San Francisco on December 2, 1897. Aboard the steamer Gaelic, Jein Chee Sing, a grocer, was number 42 on the passenger list (below) which said he was landed on December 2, 1897. 


The passenger list also said his last residence was in Santa Barbara, California. Another passenger list, at Ancestry.com, dated July 26, 1888 listed a “Jain Chee Sing”, number 657, whose case went to court. I believe “Jain Chee Sing” was the same person as Jein Chee Sing.


In Santa Barbara, Jein Lun Lane operated the Shanghai Company. 

Morning Press, January 4, 1898

While visiting San Francisco, Jein Lun Lane met his future wife. The San Francisco Examiner, October 4, 1903, reported their upcoming marriage. 
Ward of Mission to Marry Next Tuesday
The wedding of Miss Chew Kum Lom, a ward of the Presbyterian Mission, and Jein Lun Lane, which will take place next Tuesday night, will be an interesting event. Half a thousand invitations are out, and the guests will include some of the most prominent Presbyterian people of this city. The girl is a favorite with visitors to the Mission, and ever since she was old enough to go into company she has been entertained in many of the beautiful Western Addition homes. 

The romance of these two Chinese young people began two months ago during the visit of the merchant to this city. He caught eight of the girl on her way back to the Mission from a fancy afternoon tea. In gay silk clothes, and with arms full of flowers, Miss Chew made so pretty a picture that Jein Lun Lane decided that he must make tho acquaintance of the winsome maiden. 

Through the influence of a mutual friend, Miss Chew and Jein Lun Lane met, and soon after became engaged. 

The merchant is a heavy taxpayer and the proprietor of the largest Chinese bazaar in Santa Barbara. He has built and furnished an artistic house, which will be his gift to his bride. He has already given her a casket of jewels.

Tho wedding will take place in the large reception room of the Mission. The Rev. Dr. Condit will officiate. 
The San Francisco Call, October 6, 1903, marriage license notice said 
Jein Lun Lane, 27, Santa Barbara, and Chew Kum Lon, 18, 920 Sacramento street. 
The 1910 United States Census counted the Jein family of five (lines 62 to 66) in Santa Barbara at 414 West Islay Street. 


On June 11, 1913, Greg’s father, Joseph, was born in Santa Barbara. 

The Morning Press, April 18, 1916, reported Jein Lun Lane’s retirement. 
Chinese Hints Now Ready to Retire 
Shanghai Company to Close After Twenty-Nine Years Continuous Business
Twenty-nine years’ continuous business in this city is a record of which any firm could well be proud, especially when coupled with a reputation for honesty and square dealing. This is the record of the Shanghai company, dealers in oriental gods, 716 State street. Twenty-nine years ago Jein C. Sing and Jung Yung came to Santa Barbara and opened their first store. As the years passed their reputation for reliability increased and their stock was accordingly enlarged from time to time. Business acumen and pertinacity have brought their reward, and now they are retiring from the cares of business, comfortably fixed, so far as the comforts of this world are concerned, content to rest with their well earned laurels. Mr. Yung will return in the near future to Canton, China, his old home, where he has been but three times in the twenty-nine years. His last visit to the land of his birth was eight years ago. Mr. Sing is well satisfied with Santa Barbara, and will remain here, as he desires his children to finish their course in the public schools. The firm will close out their business with a sale which will be announced in the advertising columns of the Morning Press tomorrow morning.
Jein Lun Lane changed his mind as told in the Morning Press, December 2, 1916. 
Chinese Merchant Opens New Store
Jein Lun Lane, a Chinese merchant who was interested in the Shanghai company throughout its twenty-nine years’ business in this city, discontinued only a short time ago, has made arrangements to reembark in the same line of trade, Chinese and Japanese fancy goods, and his store will be opened today at 1228 State street, under the name of the Jein Curio company. The new concern will carry a large stock of fine goods, especially appropriate to the Christmas holidays, and Jein Lun Lane will be glad to welcome to the establishment all of the many friends he has made during his long career as a dealer in Santa Barbara.
Morning Press, December 2, 1916

Mission Santa Barbara: Early Days in Alta California (1917) included a Classified Business Directory. 
Art Goods
Jein Curio Co., Chinese and Japanese Art Goods, 1228 State St.
In the 1920 census, Jein Lun Lane and his wife, Helen, had five children, David, Nora, Helen, Joseph and Barbara (lines 83 to 89). They lived at the same address, 414 West Islay Street.


The Santa Barbara County telephone directory, January 1926, had this listing: “Jein Curio Co 1228 State 2811-J”.

According to the 1930 census, the Jein family (lines 9 to 15), resided at 418 West Islay Street. 


In 1931 Joseph graduated from Santa Barbara High School. 

Olive and Gold yearbook

The 1940 census said Joseph, a cook, and his sister, Dorothy, lived with their parents (lines 72 to 75) at the same address. 


On October 16, 1940, Joseph signed his World War II draft card. He was described as five feet seven inches, 150 pounds, with brown eyes and black hair. His veteran’s file (at Ancestry.com) said he served in the Navy. Joseph enlisted on December 10, 1942 and was discharged on November 25, 1945. 


Joseph married Chuey L. Lee on January 10, 1944 somewhere in California. 

The Handbook of Chinese in America (1946) included the following entry. 
甄倫合古玩店 Jein Curio Co., 1228 State St., Tel. 27122
Greg’s uncle, David, passed away on March 14, 1949. 

The Santa Barbara News-Press, January 24, 1962, reported Jein Lun Lane’s passing. 
Funeral services for Jein Lun Lane, 98, who died at his home at 418 Islay St. Monday will be held in the Chapel the Chimes in Inglewood Park Cemetery at 1 pm Saturday. Friends may call at the Welch Ryce Associates mortuary until 9 am Saturday. 

Mr. Jein was known here as a curio and art dealer. Jein operated Curio Co at 1228 State St. from 1917 to 1945 when he retired. He is survived by his wife Mrs. Helen Jein whom he married in San Francisco in 1903. 

Also surviving are four daughters, Nora May Jung and Helen Soo Hoo of Los Angeles and Barbara Chow-Jowe [1915–2007] and Dorothy Yip [1923– ] of San Francisco; a son, Joseph Jein of Los Angeles; six grandchildren and two great grandchildren.
According to the California Death Index, Greg’s mother, Helen, passed away on March 29, 1982. Greg’s father, Joseph, passed away on February 22, 1991. 

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(Updated September 28, 2023; next post on Wednesday: Yun Gee in The Young Companion 良友)