Scott
Gustafson
Among Scott Gustafsons first artistic inspirations were the cartoons of Walt Disney
and the Warner Brothers. By the time he finished growing up in Marengo, Illinois,
Gustafson was convinced that he wanted to be an animator. It wasnt until he was
halfway through high school that he discovered the book The Boys King Arthur tucked
away in a corner of the library. Its illustrations by N.C. Wyeth galvanized him, making
him realize that this was the sort of detail, color and vibrancy he had been looking for
all his artistic life.
While Gustafson pursued animation throughout his years at the Chicago
Academy of Fine Arts and Columbia College, also in Illinois, he still sought illustrations
by Wyeth, Arthur Rackham, Norman Rockwell, Maxfield Parrish and others. It was not until
he discovered the realities of the animation industry that he started to consider fine art
illustration as a career option. The opportunities of animation, in terms of subject
matter and creative control, werent nearly as interesting or rewarding as those of
illustration, he says.
His classic, opulent approach elicited immediate response, and soon his work was appearing
in magazines as diverse as The Saturday Evening Post and Playboy. His work came to the
attention of book publishers and he began to illustrate anew such classic childrens
books as The Night Before Christmas, The Nutcracker and Peter Pan. At that time, he also
wrote and illustrated new volumes, including Alphabet Soup and The Animal Orchestra.
As Gustafsons readership grew, so did interest in his work as a subject for
collectors plates. He has created more than a dozen paintings, based on fairy tales
and nursery rhymes, for this purpose. Today Scott continues to explore the delights his
art can bring to young and old alikeincluding in the medium of porcelain. In 1997,
The Greenwich Workshop® Collection introduced Gustafsons treasures for the
child in each of us as exquisitely detailed three-dimensional works of art. |