The Penny Magazine
Date1896
Artist
Ethel Reed
(American graphic artist, 1874–1912)
Illustration CitationAdvertising poster for The Penny Magazine, 1896
MediumTwo-color commercial lithograph
Dimensionssheet: 20 3/4 × 10 3/8 in. (52.7 × 26.4 cm)
Credit LineGift of Helen Farr Sloan, 1978
Object number1978-272
On View
Not on viewClassificationsPRINT
Label TextA native of Massachusetts, Ethel Reed briefly attended Cowles School of Art in Boston, and by the age of 19 had a studio on Boylston Street, participating in many group shows in the Boston area. In the mid-1890s, she joined two Boston-area publishers — Copeland and Day and Lamson, Wolffe and Co. — as a book illustrator and cover design artist. She also created advertising posters for the publishers' products, often inspired by the Art Nouveau style, as well as by the expanses of flat color characteristic of Japanese art. Reed gained international recognition for her work and by 1896 was living in London, invited to replace Aubrey Beardsley on the avant-garde journal The Yellow Book. Mysteriously, Reed and her work disappeared from public view in 1898. It is now believed that she suffered from various illnesses and fell into poverty.William McGregor Paxton
1895