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Bob Artley
Illustrator and cartoonist

Bob Artley

The basics

Quick Facts

Intro
Illustrator and cartoonist
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Franklin County
Age
94 years
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

George Robert "Bob" Artley (July 1, 1917 – October 21, 2011) was a professional illustrator, commercial artist, cartoonist, and writer. He was probably best known for his editorial cartoons which ran in the Des Moines Tribune, the Worthington, MN Daily Globe, and the Rochester, MN-based AgriNews and for his feature panel "Memories of a Former Kid", many of which still appear in publication. Artley also wrote or illustrated many books, most of which recount his memories of growing up on his parent's Northern Iowa farm during the first half of the 20th Century.

Early life

Artley, the first born of George Denison Artley and Elsie Louise (Crow) Artley, was born on the family farm (established by his grandfather in 1877) five miles west of Hampton and three miles east of Latimer, Iowa. Artley attended grade school at a country school within a two-mile walking distance of his parent's farm and after passing his eighth grade exams, went on to Hampton High School where he graduated in 1935. While growing up, Artley took an interest in drawing and art, an interest which was nurtured by friends and family. During High School, Artley started focusing on editorial cartooning, partly at the behest of Miss Dunn, Artley's English teacher, and was featured at the high school and in local stores and publications. This exposure led to his being mentored by Artley's idol, the Des Moines Tribune's J.N. "Ding" Darling, who critiqued his work, supplied him with drawing supplies, and suggested he start drawing from life about subjects close to him – thus Artley's lifelong stock in trade of drawing scenes from the farm. Although he drew all the livestock and animals on the farm, many of his first subjects were the pigs since their pen was most available and many of his earliest sketches can be seen in his 2003 book Living With Pigs. His love for drawing was matched with his love for farm life:

"I like everything about a farm," he said in a 2003 interview with the Worthington Globe Gazette. “There was a downside, of course, like everything else. It was hard work – discouraging at times – but you’re outside. I liked the outside. I liked the animals. I just liked the whole farm atmosphere.”

After high school, he attended Grinnell College while helping his father on the farm. In the fall of 1941, just before starting what would be his senior year at Grinnell, Artley volunteered for the U.S. Army. After first being assigned to the Army Corps of Engineers, he was later transferred to the Medical Corps where he was a Medic and then a Laboratory Technician drawing slides. Although his wartime service was all stateside, he was being trained to be part of the U.S. force for the Operation Downfall invasion of the Japanese Homelands when the atomic bombs ended the war. While in the Army in 1943, he met and married fellow lab technician and Women's Army Auxiliary Corps enlistee Virginia E. (Ginny) Moore, of South Fork, PA while they were both stationed at Fort Leonard Wood, MO. Artley returned to civilian life in 1946 where he continued farming with his father. In 1950, he returned to college on the G.I. Bill of Rights, attending the University of Iowa, and completed his Bachelor of Fine Arts in 1951.

Drawing career

While at the University of Iowa, he did editorial cartoons for the school's paper, the Daily Iowan, and his work caught the attention of the Des Moines Tribune where he worked from 1952 to 1957. Artley went on to work for Nelson Advertising Agency for a year and then was art director for Plain Talk Publishing (both in Des Moines) for nine years. During these years, he was active in the area arts communities as a member of the Des Moines Art Center, through teaching art classes, conducting numerous "chalk talks" at various schools and civic functions, and mentoring local aspiring artists. In 1967, the Artley's moved to Adrian, MN where the couple published the small town newspaper, The Nobles County Review. Shortly after, they purchased a building in Adrian and began a commercial printing company, The Print Shop.

In 1971, he began doing some commercial and cartoon work for the Worthington Daily Globe, which eventually led to exclusive cartoon work and his editorial cartoons were routinely among the best in the country. During his time at The Globe, he started a periodic and popular cartoon of life on the farm during his childhood called, "Memories of a Former Kid." This led in 1978 to Artley self-publishing the book by the same name. Due to its popularity, Artley couldn’t keep up with the demand and sold the rights to Iowa State University Press. On June 8, 1982, the day the “Memories of a Former Kid” cartoon began appearing in the Mason City, Iowa Globe Gazette, Artley described what he was trying to achieve in depicting Iowa farm life in the 1920s and 30s:

“I wanted to show how things used to be done,” he said, “the mood of the times, the poetry of living then. I wanted to give proper perspective to a life that was good and can still be good."

In 1982, his wife was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease which required constant care. After five years of home care, her condition worsened and she was moved to hospice at the Iowa Veterans Home where she stayed until shortly before her death in 1991 at the age of 74. Artley's book Ginny, a Love Remembered, about his wife's struggles and death, was endorsed by the Alzheimer's Association and contained a foreword by Princess Yasmin Aga Khan, daughter of 1940's starlett Rita Hayworth, who was active in Alzheimer's disease awareness due to her mother's struggles with the disease. Artley retired from full-time work in 1986.

Retirement

After his retirement, he continued drawing feature panels that were syndicated by Extra Newspaper Features Syndicate based at the Rochester (MN) Post-Bulletin. He also began writing his other books, including Christmas on the Farm, Living With Cows, and Country School Days – all richly illustrated with his drawings of rural and farm life. His books netted a substantial fan base in farming communities throughout the U.S. and Canada, and even among rural regions of Europe as they were a study in life on the farm in the first years of the previous century. Up into the 1990s, Artley made appearances on local talk shows, including Minneapolis' popular "Boone & Erickson Show" broadcast by WCCO-AM radio, to spin his stories of farm life. Many of Artley's cartoons were donated to Minnesota West Community and Technical College in 2007.

With wife Ginny, he had four children: Jeannie, Robert, Steven, and Joan (Artley) Sterner. Daughter Jeannie died at the age of 54 after a battle with breast cancer. After his wife's death, Artley's book about their life together led to meeting his second wife Margaret (Hawes). After reading Ginny, Margaret, whose spouse had also died from Alzheimers, contacted Artley and they corresponded for a time. The couple was married in 1995 and resettled to Akron, OH.

All three of Artley's surviving children collaborated on his last book, Memories of Farm Kitchen, after Artley suffered a series of strokes while putting the book together. Rob, a retired school administrator who also has a monthly opinion column in his hometown Rochester Post-Bulletin, helped in final composing and received co-author credit. Steve, who followed in his father's footsteps as an editorial cartoonist, and Joan, an illustrator, helped their father with the book's artwork.

Artley's inurnment was near his boyhood home in the Hampton Cemetery.

The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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