Arthur Paul

As Playboy Magazine’s founding art director, Art Paul used his three decades there to revolutionize illustration. It’s said that no magazine art director has commissioned more illustrators, persuaded more artists to illustrate (Warhol, Dali, and Rosenquist among them) or won more honors in giving illustration the daring and integrity of fine art. Among artists and designers Art has mentored or worked with he’s an unusually beloved and revered father figure.

But Art is unique also in having been not just an art director and graphic designer (in particular of Playboy’s rabbit logo), but also an illustrator, fine artist, curator, writer, and composer.  And there’s been a surge of interest just now in both his past and present, with recent talks, books, and a documentary on him, exhibits of his art, and performances of his writing and music.  At 91, he’s now putting his drawings and writings into book form, with projects focused on race, aging, animals, and graphic whimsy.

Exhibitions

overheard conversations with myself: the talking sketchbooks of art paul

March 22 through May 22, 2020

Noyes Cultural Arts Center, Evanston, IL

Art paul: Race face

October 26 through December 8, 2018

One After 909 Gallery, Chicago

Art Paul: Inner Faces

November 15th, 1997 through January 18th, 1998
Chicago Cultural Center

 

Art Paul Loves to Wonder

September 19th, 2015 through February 15th, 2016
Black Box Theater
Presented by Cards Against Humanity and the Chicago Design Museum

 

Art Paul: Hard Heads, Sweet Knees, Forked Tongues

June 5th through July 26th, 2015
Ukrainian Institute of Modern Art
http://uima-chicago.org/art-paul/

 

Head Games

March 14th through March 26th, 2015
Coda Gallery
http://www.codagallery.com/Artist-Detail.cfm?ArtistsID=1291
Coda represents Art's work "out west"

 

The Manuscript Illuminated

March 16th through May 4th, 2001
Columbia College Chicago

"Writing is drawing. And a window into identity, like a fingerprint. I'm fascinated by the uniqueness of handwriting, the expression embodied in it." –Art Paul