An illustrator, cartoonist, and educator, Burne Hogarth is the best-known artist to have drawn Tarzan aside from Hal Foster. Hogarth illustrated the Sunday adventures of Edgar Rice Burroughs Jungle... Read full biography
An illustrator, cartoonist, and educator, Burne Hogarth is the best-known artist to have drawn Tarzan aside from Hal Foster. Hogarth illustrated the Sunday adventures of Edgar Rice Burroughs Jungle Lord, for the majority of the period from 1937 to 1950. He also co-founded the Cartoonists and... Read full biography
An illustrator, cartoonist, and educator, Burne Hogarth is the best-known artist to have drawn Tarzan aside from Hal Foster. Hogarth illustrated the Sunday adventures of Edgar Rice Burroughs Jungle Lord, for the majority of the period from 1937 to 1950. He also co-founded the Cartoonists and Illustrators School, which was later to change its name to the School of Visual Arts and become the largest private art school in the world. Born in Chicago, Hogarth began his professional career in 1926 as... Read full biography
An illustrator, cartoonist, and educator, Burne Hogarth is the best-known artist to have drawn Tarzan aside from Hal Foster. Hogarth illustrated the Sunday adventures of Edgar Rice Burroughs Jungle Lord, for the majority of the period from 1937 to 1950. He also co-founded the Cartoonists and Illustrators School, which was later to change its name to the School of Visual Arts and become the largest private art school in the world. Born in Chicago, Hogarth began his professional career in 1926 as an assistant cartoonist with the Associated Editors Syndicate, for whom he drew a panel series titled Famous Churches of the World. By 1934, he was working in the King Features bullpen in New York City. The following year, the McNaught Syndicate... Read full biography
An illustrator, cartoonist, and educator, Burne Hogarth is the best-known artist to have drawn Tarzan aside from Hal Foster. Hogarth illustrated the Sunday adventures of Edgar Rice Burroughs Jungle Lord, for the majority of the period from 1937 to 1950. He also co-founded the Cartoonists and Illustrators School, which was later to change its name to the School of Visual Arts and become the largest private art school in the world. Born in Chicago, Hogarth began his professional career in 1926 as an assistant cartoonist with the Associated Editors Syndicate, for whom he drew a panel series titled Famous Churches of the World. By 1934, he was working in the King Features bullpen in New York City. The following year, the McNaught Syndicate assigned him to take over as an artist on the faltering pirate strip, Pieces of Eight. When Hal Foster left the Tarzan page to begin Prince Valian... Read full biography
Burne Hogarth - Artist Info
About Burne Hogarth: Books
Books & Publications (8)
Publications based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
The Artists Bluebook 34,000 North American Artists to March 2005
2005
AskART.com Inc. - Dunbier, Lonnie Pierson (Editor)
479 pages
Davenport's Art Reference: The Gold Edition
2005
Davenport, Ray
2,421 pages
Looking North: Royal Canadian Mounted Police Illustration: Potlatch Collection
2003
Marling, Karal Ann
160 pages (color)
100 Years of American Newspaper Comics An Illustrated Encyclopedia
1996
Horn, Maurice (editor)
414 pages (color)
Who's Who in American Art, 1993-1994, 20th Edition (American Federation of Arts)
1993
Bowker R R
1,473 pages
Dynamic Light and Shade
1991
Hogarth, Burne
160 pages
The Encyclopedia of American Comics From 1897 to the Present