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Barron Storey

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Barron Storey
BornApril 6, 1940
Dallas, Texas
NationalityAmerican
EducationArt Center Los Angeles, School of Visual Arts, New York City
Known forPainting, Illustration
Notable workLord of the Flies (cover, 1980 edition)
AwardsSociety of Illustrators' Gold Medal, 1976, Society of Illustrators Distinguished Educator Award, 2001

Barron Storey (born 1940, Dallas, TX) is an American illustrator, graphic novelist, and educator. He is famous for his accomplishments as an illustrator and fine artist, as well as for his career as a teacher. Storey has taught illustration since the 1970s and currently lives in San Francisco, California[1][2] and is on the faculty at San Jose State University. He trained at Art Center in Los Angeles and under Robert Weaver at the School of Visual Arts in New York.[3]

Early life

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Barron Storey was born to Juanita Williamson Storey,[4] and Lewis Barron Storey, a teacher of the Carrollton-Farmers Branch Independent School District and a tract home developer in Carrollton, Texas.[5][6][7][8]

Commercial art career

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Barron Storey has been a commercial illustrator since the 1960s, and his clients have included major magazines such as Boys' Life, Reader's Digest, and National Geographic. His cover portraits for Time of Howard Hughes and Yitzhak Rabin hang in the Smithsonian's National Portrait Gallery. His giant painting of the South American rain forest hangs in New York's American Museum of Natural History, and a 1979 rendering of the space shuttle commissioned by NASA, the first official painting ever done of it, hangs in the Air and Space Museum on the National Mall.

As a book illustrator he has done cover illustrations for the Franklin Library classics, War and Peace, The Good Earth and Stories by Sinclair Lewis; as well as the covers of Fahrenheit 451 for Del Rey / Ballantine; and, most famously, the 1980 reissue of Lord of the Flies.

Storey has also published many comics and graphic novels, including The Marat/Sade Journals (Tundra), which was nominated for an Eisner Award, Neil Gaiman's The Sandman: Endless Nights (DC/Vertigo) which won an Eisner, Tales from the Edge #1-10, Barron Storey's WATCH Magazine (Vanguard), and Life After Black (Graphic Novel Art). Several of his students, including Scott McCloud, Peter Kuper, and Dan Brereton, have become leading figures in the graphic novel field.

Academic career

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Storey has taught at the School of Visual Arts, Pratt Institute, and San Jose State University.[2]

Storey taught illustration for 30 years and co-chaired[9] the Illustration Department at the California College of Arts and Crafts, in Oakland, CA.[10][11]

Awards

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Exhibits

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  • os-cil-la-tor: Forty Years of Music Journals, Bert Green Fine Art, Chicago, IL, 2016.
  • Factum 1 and Factum 2, Bert Green Fine Art, Chicago IL, 2013.
  • Smithsonian National Portrait Gallery, Permanent Collection, Washington, D.C.
  • RE: SEX, Solo Exhibition, Bert Green Fine Art, Los Angeles, CA, 2011.
  • Tarot: An Artists' Vision of the Future, Group Exhibition, Galerie Petit Papiers, Bruxelles, Belgium, 2010.
  • RE: Bob, Solo Exhibition, Anno Domini, San Jose, CA, 2010.
  • Belle Foundation for Cultural Development, Grant, 2009.
  • Cardboard Town, Solo Exhibition, Bert Green Fine Art, Los Angeles, CA, 2009.
  • Life After Black: The Visual Journals of Barron Storey, Solo Exhibition, The American Museum of *Illustration/Society of Illustrators, New York, NY, 2009.
  • Victims, Solo Exhibition, Anno Domini, San Jose, CA, 2007.
  • Osseus Labyrint Retrospective, Solo Exhibition, Bert Green Fine Art, Los Angeles, CA, 2006.
  • Black Iraq, Solo Exhibition, Anno Domini, San Jose, CA, 2003.
  • More B.S. Than You Can Throw A Stick At, Solo Exhibition, Anno Domini, San Jose, CA, 2001.
  • Screever, Solo Exhibition, Fifty 24SF, San Francisco, CA, 2001.
  • Unfunny Comics, Solo Exhibition, Fobbo Gallery, San Francisco, CA, 1991.
  • Grains of Sand: 25 Years of the Sandman, Cartoon Art Museum, San Francisco, CA, 2013-14.

Praise from the art community

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Neil Gaiman, Neil Gaiman Journal, "Lots of people have learned from Barron Storey: Bill Sienkiewicz, and Dave McKean, and Kent Williams and many others, and they're all very proud to admit it. He's a true original, and there aren't many of those around."

David Choe wrote of Barron in his book, Slow Jams (1999): "Nobody draws better than Barron. Not you, not your little sister, your architect dad, not your rebellious ex-boyfriend who draws with his own blood, not the most talented kid at your art school. Not your favorite artist in the whole world; I've seen the work with my own eyes. Nobody draws better than The Barron."

Personal life

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Storey married three times.[4] Storey lost his mother, uncle, an ex-wife, and a best friend, to suicide.[12][13][7][14][15]

See also

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Further reading

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References

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  1. ^ "Life after Black - the Visual Journals of Barron Storey". 15 July 2009.
  2. ^ a b "Barron Storey - Illustration History".
  3. ^ "Barron Storey".
  4. ^ a b "Paint it Black".
  5. ^ "Lewis Barron Storey".
  6. ^ "Lewis Storey Obituary (2003) - Dallas, TX - Dallas Morning News". Legacy.com.
  7. ^ a b "Steven Fife Storey - View Obituary & Service Information". 31 July 2020.
  8. ^ "Lewis Storey obit". Tyler Morning Telegraph. 20 September 2003. p. 15.
  9. ^ "Barron Storey – Society of Illustrators".
  10. ^ "Barron Storey Went to Bat for His "Car and Driver" Artwork". 17 September 2013.
  11. ^ "Barron Storey – Exhibitions And Awards".
  12. ^ "Barron Storey Presents 'Suicide'". 9 October 2013.
  13. ^ "Barron Storey | Inkstuds Radio". Archived from the original on 2023-09-27.
  14. ^ "Lewallen-Garcia-Pipkin Funeral Home". www.lewallengarciapipkinfh.com.
  15. ^ "Steven Barron Storey Obituary (1995 - 2022) | Caldwell, Texas".
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