Margaret Brundage

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In Weird Tales, Brundage illustrates Robert E. Howard's Queen of the Black Coast, a story about Conan the Barbarian.
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In Weird Tales, Brundage illustrates Robert E. Howard's Queen of the Black Coast, a story about Conan the Barbarian.

Margaret Brundage, born Margaret Hedda Johnson (December 9, 1900 - April 9, 1976) was a American illustrator and painter who is remembered chiefly for having illustrated the pulp magazine Weird Tales. Working in pastels on illustration board, she created most of the covers for Weird Tales between 1933 and 1938.

Brundage was born in Chicago, Illinois, of Swedish and Irish ancestry. Her father died when she was eight years old; she was raised by her mother (Margaret Jane Loutit Johnson) and grandmother in a Christian Science household. She attended McKinley High School in Chicago, where, coincidentally, Walt Disney was a classmate. ("I finished; he didn't," she later remarked.) Her education continued at the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts, 1921-23, (where Disney once again was her classmate); she later stated that her failure to graduate was due to her inept lettering. She worked as a fashion illustrator before becoming the chief cover artist for Weird Tales. In 1927, she married Myron "Slim" Brundage, former hobo, a man with tendencies toward radical politics and alcohol; they had one child, a son, Kerlynn Byrd Brundage (1929-72). The marriage was not a success, and ended in divorce in 1939.

Over the period from 1933 to 1938, Brundage executed cover art, first for Oriental Stories, later known as The Magic Carpet [see Oriental Stories/The Magic Carpet (magazine)], then, famously, for Weird Tales. She was the most frequently-appearing cover artist on Weird Tales during her stint with the magazine. Her first cover appeared on the Sept. 1932 issue; she created covers for 39 straight issues from June 1933 to August 1936. Her last original cover was for the Jan. 1945 issue, for a total of 66 original-artwork covers. (The total of 67, often cited in sources, includes a repeat of that final 1945 cover on the Nov. 1953 issue.) She was paid $90 per cover--enough to support herself, her son, and her invalid mother (died 1940) in years when her husband contributed nothing to the family's survival. From 1936 through 1938, Brundage often alternated with others as cover artist; Virgil Finlay was her chief competitor.

Brundage's art frequently featured damsels in distress in various states of full or partial nudity; her whipping scenes were especially noteworthy and controversial. Her sensual images usually illustrated scenes from the pieces chosen by editor Farnsworth Wright as cover stories; her work was so popular among readers that some WT writers, like Seabury Quinn, cannily included scenes in their stories that would make good Brundage covers.

Since she signed her work "M. Brundage", many of the magazine's readers were unaware that the artist was female. (Complaints about the erotic nature of her work increased after October 1934, when editor Wright revealed that the "M." stood for "Margaret," that the artist was a woman.) After 1938, when the magazine's editorial offices moved from Chicago to New York City, a new 'decency' standard was imposed (primarily through the efforts of then-mayor of New York Fiorello La Guardia) on pulp magazines sold at newsstands, and the nude or semi-nude young women that had been the primary subjects of Brundage's covers were out. Practical problems with shipping Brundage's fragile pastel art fom Chicago to New York also diminished her appeal to the editorial regime that followed Wright's 1940 departure.

L. Sprague de Camp is often quoted as claiming she used her daughters as models; but Brundage had no daughters. In the letters page for Savage Tales magazine, No.5 (July, 1974), Robert Weinberg, an authority on pulp magazines, wrote "much as I hate to discredit a good story, WT cover artist Margaret Brundage did not have a daughter who posed for her. As Mrs. Brundage lives in Chicago and I have interviewed her, this is straight from the artist's mouth."

She continued to draw after her relationship with the magazine ended, and appeared at a number of science fiction conventions and art fairs, where some of her original period works were stolen. Yet she never fully recovered financially from the loss of regular work at WT; her later years were spent in relative poverty. She continued to work until her death.

L. Sprague de Camp described the typical subject of her pictures as "naked heroines being tortured, raped, and disemboweled"; Forrest J. Ackerman similarly wrote of "Margaret Brundage, with her titillating pulchrinudes on the covers of Weird Tales: naked ladies being sacrificed, semi-clad heroines being menaced by all manner of monstrous beings."

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