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・ Tom Martin (writer)
・ Tom Martin Biseth
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・ Tom Martinez (disambiguation)
・ Tom Lonie
・ Tom Lopez
・ Tom Lorcan
・ Tom Lord-Alge
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Tom Lovell
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・ Tom Lowe (radio)
・ Tom Lowe (writer)
・ Tom Lowrie
・ Tom Lowrie (professor)
・ Tom Lowry
・ Tom Loyless
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Tom Lovell : ウィキペディア英語版
Tom Lovell

Tom Lovell (5 February 1909 – 29 June 1997) was an American illustrator and painter.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111108155312/http://www.petroleummuseum.org/Exhibits/tomlovellBio.html )〕 He was a prolific creator of pulp fiction magazine covers and illustrations, and of visual art of the American West. He produced illustrations for ''National Geographic'' magazine, and many others, and painted many historical Western subjects such as interactions between Indians and white settlers and traders. He was inducted into the Society of Illustrators Hall of Fame in 1974.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Hall of Fame Past Inductees )
== Life ==

Lovell was born in New York City on 5 February 1909 to Henry S. Lovell Jr, a telephone engineer, and Edith Scott (Russell) Lovell, and was the second of three children〔"Tom Lovell". Field Guide To Wild American Pulp Artists.〕 He was a keen reader as a child, and although received no early training in art he often visited the Museum of Natural History in New York, beginning a fascination with Native American objects and weapons. In 1927 he was the valedictorian at his high school graduation, where he spoke on "the ill treatment of the American Indian by the U. S. Government.” Lovell attended Syracuse University 1927 - 1931. Lovell married Gloyd "Pink" Simmons in 1934 and moved to Norwalk, Connecticut. They had two children, David and Deborah.〔Keeping the Spirit Alive". American Cowboy magazine. Sep–Oct 1994: 55–60.〕 In 1940 Lovell and his family moved to an artists colony at Westport, Connecticut where he became close friends with Harold Von Schmidt, John Clymer and Robert Loughweed. In 1972 he moved to Santa Fe New Mexico. In 1977 he moved to a seven-acre site in Santa Fe and built an adobe house and studio. Lovell died in a car crash in New Mexico on 29 June 1997, aged 88. His 48-year-old daughter Deborah was also killed in the accident.〔Crossings". American Cowboy magazine. Sep-Oct 1997: 14〕

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