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Andrew Loomis
Andrew Loomis
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William Andrew Loomis (June 15, 1892 – May 25, 1959) was an American illustrator, writer, and art instructor. His commercial work was featured prominently in advertising and magazines. However, Loomis is best known as the writer of a series of instructional art books printed throughout the 20th century, and also as the inventor of the "Loomis method". Long after his death, Loomis's realistic style has continued to influence popular artists.

Key Information

Early life

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Loomis was born on June 15, 1892, in Syracuse, New York. Loomis grew up in Zanesville, Ohio, and spent much of his working life in Chicago, Illinois. He studied at the Art Students League of New York under George Bridgman and Frank DuMond when he was 19.[1] Loomis then went back to Chicago to work at an art studio[1] and study at the Art Institute of Chicago.[2]

Career

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1938 painting by Andrew Loomis, representing the Dionne quintuplets.
1930s painting by Andrew Loomis, representing Frances Herdlinger at the Mars Factory

After military service in World War I, Loomis worked for a couple of advertising agencies before opening his own studio in downtown Chicago in 1922.[3] From that time until the late 1930s Loomis produced advertising paintings for many large companies such as Coca-Cola, Studebaker, Palmolive, Quaker Oats, Munsingwear,[3] and Kellogg's.[4] He was the official portrait painter of the Dionne quintuplets,[3] and he created Jack and Bingo for the cover of the Cracker Jack box. In 1932, Loomis created paintings for the advertisements that would introduce 3 Musketeers. One of those paintings was a portrait of a Mars chemist, Frances Herdlinger. Herdlinger was one of three women chemists working regularly with Forrest Mars Sr. on the development of the new candy bar.[5][6]

In the 1930s, he taught at the American Academy of Art. It was during this time that his teaching techniques were compiled for his first book, Fun With a Pencil (1939).[7]

Loomis would go on to release several more books in the coming decades, including one of his most popular, Figure Drawing for All It's Worth (1943).[8] Many of the books exhibit his own personally crafted techniques – such as the "ball and plane" method of head drawing – guided by Loomis's humorous dialogue. Many of the titles gained strong appeal for their academic value and went through several printings during the 20th century. Loomis died in 1959, but his final book, The Eye of the Painter and the Elements of Beauty (1961), was printed posthumously.[9]

The Loomis method

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The Loomis Method is a drawing technique that uses grids to represent the human head from various angles accurately. This technique was developed by Loomis in the 1940s, and was first described in his book Drawing the Head and Hands.[10] The Loomis method for the construction of the head is very popular because it is easy to learn and remember and can be applied to any drawing of the head.[11]

Influence and legacy

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Titan Books reissued the Andrew Loomis titles in facsimile editions between 2011 and 2013. Prior to that, the books had been out of print for decades, available only as excerpts by Walter Foster Publishing. Some of Loomis's books are currently being published in Japanese via Maar Sha Co., Ltd. Early prints have become highly collectible, sought by art enthusiasts and practitioners.

Bibliography

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References

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
William Andrew Loomis (June 15, 1892 – May 25, 1959) was an American illustrator, author, and art instructor whose commercial illustrations appeared prominently in advertising and magazines, while his instructional books on drawing techniques revolutionized art education for generations of artists. Born in , and raised in , Loomis developed an early interest in art amid the cultural and technological advancements of his youth. He pursued formal training at the Art Students League of New York in 1911 under instructors Frank DuMond and , followed by studies at the in 1915 while apprenticing in the Charles Daniel Frey studio. In 1917, Loomis enlisted in the U.S. Army's Engineering Corps, serving 20 months including time in France during , an experience that honed his technical skills. Loomis's professional career as an included high-profile commissions for brands such as and Kellogg’s, with standout works like the Sears Magazine Cover (c. 1927). In , he taught at the American Academy of Art in , where he refined the "Loomis method" for constructing human heads and figures. His authorship of seminal books, including Fun with a Pencil (1939), for All It's Worth (1943), Creative Illustration (1947), Successful (1951), the Head and Hands (1956), and the posthumous Eye of the Painter and Elements of Beauty (1961), provided comprehensive guides to , perspective, and creative processes. Loomis's legacy endures through reissues of his works by Titan Books (2011–2013) and influences on contemporary artists like Steve Lieber and .

Life and Education

Early Life

William Andrew Loomis was born on June 15, 1892, in , to parents Newell Ely Loomis (1858–1923) and Grace Kendall Stevens Loomis (1860–1932). He had at least three siblings: Julia M. Loomis Slack, Lyman Stevens Loomis, and Marjorie E. Loomis Hanlon. Historical records provide limited details on his family's dynamics or his parents' professions, representing a notable gap in available biographical information. During his childhood, the Loomis family relocated from Syracuse to , where he spent much of his formative years in a Midwestern setting. As a youngster in this environment, Loomis developed an early interest in art, enjoying sketching and drawing pictures on his own. This self-taught pursuit was further inspired by a visit to the nearby studio of illustrator , an encounter that solidified his aspiration for an artistic career.

Education

Loomis began his formal artistic education in 1911 at the age of 19, enrolling at the Art Students League of New York, where he studied under the influential instructors and Frank DuMond. Bridgman, renowned for his expertise in and , taught Loomis constructive approaches to the human form, emphasizing the breakdown of figures into basic geometric shapes and masses to achieve accurate proportions and movement. DuMond, meanwhile, instructed in composition and , providing foundational principles for balanced and harmonious illustrations. Following his time in New York, Loomis relocated to and attended the around 1915 while apprenticing at the Charles Daniel Frey studio, focusing on core and techniques under instructors such as Leopold Seifert. The curriculum there stressed practical skills essential for , including rendering techniques and observational accuracy. Through intensive sessions with live models at both institutions, Loomis developed a realistic style rooted in classical methods, prioritizing anatomical precision and lifelike representation over stylization. During his training, Loomis experimented with abstraction methods, such as constructing figures from simple geometric forms like boxes and cylinders, influenced by Bridgman's teachings on form and plane construction. These early practices helped simplify complex for efficient sketching and laid the groundwork for his later instructional approaches. After serving in from 1917 to 1919, Loomis returned to , where he emphasized the practical application of his acquired skills in settings, integrating academic training with real-world demands.

Career

Illustration and Advertising

Following his education, Andrew Loomis established his own illustration studio at 360 North Michigan Avenue in downtown in 1922, marking the beginning of his independent commercial career. Prior to this, his service in the U.S. Army during had interrupted his early professional pursuits, but upon returning in the early 1920s, he resumed work in advertising agencies before transitioning to freelance operations. His anatomical training from the proved invaluable in rendering lifelike figures for commercial assignments. Loomis quickly secured major commissions that showcased his ability to integrate products seamlessly into engaging narratives. For , he created advertisements in the 1920s, such as the 1924 "Soda Jerk" piece and the "Bathers" illustration, where the beverage appeared naturally within lively, everyday American scenes to evoke refreshment and social connection. Similarly, his work for Kellogg’s cereal campaigns in the 1920s, including illustrations for and Shredded Krumbles featuring adventurous Boy Scouts, emphasized wholesomeness and energy to appeal to families. In the 1930s, Loomis painted annual portraits of the for calendars, capturing their growth from infancy through childhood in tender, detailed compositions that highlighted innocence and familial warmth. In 1949, he created the 30 x 40 inch oil on canvas painting "This is America" as a calendar illustration for Shaw-Barton. He also designed the iconic mascots Jack and Bingo for box covers, introducing the sailor boy and his dog in 1916 but refining them in promotional art through the decades to symbolize fun and surprise. Loomis's style in these commercial pieces featured idealized depictions of , with dynamic compositions that drew viewers into moments and photorealistic rendering achieved through or board, tailored for reproduction in magazines like and large-scale billboards. His freelance practice reached its height in and , during which he balanced high-volume output for clients like and Palmolive while prioritizing streamlined workflows to consistently meet tight advertising deadlines.

Authorship

Andrew Loomis transitioned from commercial illustration to authorship in the late 1930s, driven by his extensive teaching experience and a growing need for practical art instruction amid the economic hardships of the Great Depression. Having taught at the American Academy of Art in Chicago during the 1930s, Loomis sought to codify his refined techniques into accessible materials that could empower aspiring artists facing limited opportunities for formal training. His debut book, Fun with a Pencil (1939), emerged as a response to this demand, offering an engaging introduction to drawing and cartooning tailored for beginners while incorporating foundational principles applicable to professionals. To maintain creative control over content and distribution, Loomis initially self-published his works through his Chicago-based studio, allowing him to directly address the needs of students and self-taught artists without intermediary constraints. This approach reflected his decades of hands-on experience in , where he distilled complex skills—like proportion, perspective, and composition—into step-by-step breakdowns that emphasized practical application over abstract theory. The success of Fun with a Pencil, which reached six printings by , validated this strategy and provided resources to fund further projects, though Loomis balanced manuscript preparation with ongoing commercial demands. During and after , Loomis intensified his focus on authorship as a means of broad , compensating for the decline in studio-based by reaching global audiences through print. Collaborating with for subsequent titles, such as Figure Drawing for All It's Worth (1943) and Creative Illustration (1947), enabled wider dissemination and professional polish, transforming his personal methodologies into enduring educational tools. These postwar efforts drew directly from his accumulated expertise, prioritizing clarity and encouragement to guide readers from novice exercises to advanced creative problem-solving.

Techniques

The Loomis Method

The Loomis Method, introduced in Andrew Loomis's 1956 book Drawing the Head and Hands, employs a grid system derived from a basic egg shape to establish accurate proportions for the . This approach simplifies the complex organic form by breaking it down into geometric components, allowing artists to construct heads reliably from any angle. The step-by-step process begins with drawing a to represent the cranium, which forms the upper portion of the head. A plane is then added as a flattened, angular form attached below the sphere, creating an egg-like silhouette. The face is divided into thirds vertically: the first third from the hairline to the brow line, the second from the brow to the base of the nose, and the third from the nose to the chin, ensuring balanced feature placement. Perspective lines, such as a horizontal axis for the eyes and curved guidelines wrapping around the sphere, are applied to adjust for the head's tilt or rotation, maintaining depth and foreshortening. At its core, the method relies on through the "ball and plane" principle, where the spherical cranium (ball) intersects with planar elements like the and brow to abstract the head's volume. This ensures consistent proportions across views—front, profile, and three-quarter—by treating the head as a modifiable block rather than a flat outline. In the front view, is symmetrical with straight vertical divisions; the profile compresses the sphere into an with a squared ; and the three-quarter view combines these, shifting guidelines to account for . The method's advantages lie in its versatility, supporting applications from caricatures and realistic portraits to , by prioritizing construction lines over immediate detailing to build a solid foundation. It promotes efficiency, as repeated practice yields dimensional accuracy without reliance on tracing or memorization. For variations, the same grid accommodates male heads with broader jaws and prominent brows, female heads with softer contours and narrower chins, aging effects through elongated proportions or sagging planes, and expressions via subtle shifts in feature lines—all while preserving the underlying structure.

Other Methods

In Figure Drawing for All It's Worth (1943), Loomis instructs artists to break down the human figure using simple geometric forms, such as boxes for the and cylinders for the limbs, to establish solid proportions and three-dimensional structure before adding details. This method simplifies complex , allowing for accurate rendering in various poses and perspectives, with the wooden mannikin serving as a practical tool to visualize mass and bulk. To infuse dynamism, he advocates gesture lines—curved arcs that capture the sweep of movement and suggest action, such as a figure in mid-twist or stride—drawn early to guide the overall flow and avoid stiff, mechanical results. Building on these foundations, Loomis addresses perspective and composition in Creative Illustration (1947), stressing the creation of engaging storytelling scenes through strategic placement of elements. He recommends using focal points to direct viewer attention toward narrative key moments, often employing principles like the rule of thirds to balance the picture plane and enhance visual interest. Tonal values play a crucial role, with contrasts between light and shadow unifying the composition and evoking mood, ensuring the illustration communicates effectively in commercial contexts. Loomis introduces four basic tonal plans to organize values systematically, using distinct separations of white, light gray, dark gray, and black: (1) grays and black on white for full range on a light ground; (2) black, white, and dark gray on light gray for contrast on a mid-light ground; (3) black, white, and light gray on dark gray for emphasis on a mid-dark ground; and (4) grays and white on black for low key on a dark ground. Loomis further develops light and shadow principles in Successful Drawing (1951). He illustrates value separation through examples like a figure against a , where distinct planes of full light, , and shadow define form without muddiness, promoting clarity in rendering. At the core of Loomis's teachings lies a holistic that prioritizes individual artistic style over mechanical imitation, urging artists to integrate precise anatomical study with imaginative interpretation to foster originality. He adapted these techniques differently for commercial illustration, favoring idealized, appealing proportions for advertising, versus the more expressive freedom in , while incorporating basic —such as relating hues through tonal influence—to harmonize elements, drawing from the teachings of his mentor Frank DuMond at the Art Students League. The head construction method briefly integrates as a proportional anchor when extending to full figures, ensuring cohesive body-head relationships.

Legacy and Works

Influence and Reissues

Andrew Loomis's instructional methods profoundly shaped mid-20th-century illustration, influencing a wide array of artists during the golden age of American commercial art. As a key figure in the mass-market era of the 1920s to 1940s, his emphasis on realistic figure construction and storytelling techniques set standards for blending fine art with advertising and narrative visuals, resonating with contemporaries like Norman Rockwell in their shared pursuit of emotional and dramatic representation. Loomis's impact extended notably to comic book artists, who drew on his systematic approaches to anatomy and proportion for dynamic figure work. Prominent examples include Alex Ross, Dick Giordano, Steve Rude, and Steve Lieber, whose realistic styles in superhero and sequential art echo Loomis's grounded drawing principles. Ross, in particular, has highlighted studying Loomis's books as a teenager and attending the same Chicago art school where Loomis taught, crediting them with providing foundational skills for his photorealistic comic renderings. Titan Books revitalized Loomis's oeuvre through facsimile reissues starting in 2011, restoring full original content from manuscripts that had been unavailable for decades. Titles such as Figure Drawing for All It's Worth (reissued May 2011) and Drawing the Head and Hands (2011) were among the first, followed by others like Successful Drawing and Creative Illustration by 2013, making his comprehensive techniques accessible once again to students and professionals worldwide. These editions preserved Loomis's detailed illustrations and pedagogical clarity, significantly broadening their reach beyond rare secondhand markets. In the , Loomis's legacy persists as a democratizing force in art education, empowering self-taught creators through his clear, methodical breakdowns of complex forms. His timeless focus on natural observation and technical freedom continues to inform digital artists, particularly in for video games and film, where structured remains essential. Original prints and early book editions, valued for their , command high prices among collectors, with auction records reflecting demand for pieces from his and illustrative career.

Bibliography

Andrew Loomis's major publications, focused on instructional art books, are presented below in chronological order of their original release, with details on publishers, brief focus, and notable editions or reissues. Fun with a Pencil (1939, The ), an introductory guide to sketching, cartooning, and basic techniques for . It was reissued as a edition by Titan Books in April 2013. Figure Drawing for All It's Worth (1943, The Viking Press), a comprehensive manual on human figure anatomy, proportion, and dynamic posing. It was reissued as a facsimile edition by Titan Books in May 2011. Creative Illustration (1947, The Viking Press), an advanced text on pictorial composition, , and techniques for and editorial . It was reissued as a facsimile edition by Titan Books in October 2012. Successful Drawing (1951, The Viking Press), a broad overview of foundational drawing principles including perspective, light, and form. It was reissued as a facsimile edition by Titan Books in May 2012. Drawing the Head and Hands (1956, The Viking Press), a specialized guide emphasizing construction and rendering of facial features, expressions, and hand anatomy. It was reissued as a facsimile edition by Titan Books in October 2011. The Eye of the Painter and the Elements of (1961, The ), a posthumous work on , , and the principles of in , completed and edited by Loomis's wife after his in 1959. I'd Love to Draw! (2014, Titan Books), a posthumous compilation of beginner-oriented tips and illustrations drawn from Loomis's unpublished notes and manuscripts.

References

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