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good girl art : ウィキペディア英語版
good girl art

Good girl art (GGA) is artwork featuring attractive women in comic books, comic strips, and pulp magazines.〔 As it appeared in ''Vanity Fair''.〕
Richard A. Lupoff defined good girl art as:
==History==

The term "Good Girl Art" was coined by the American Comic Book Company in its mail order catalogs.
It was during this era that the terms ''Good Girl Art'' and ''Esoteric Comics'' became widely used by the collecting community. Use of the phrase has since expanded to indicate a style of artwork in which attractive female characters of comic books, cartoons and covers for digest magazines, paperbacks and pulp magazines are rendered in a lush manner and are shown in provocative (and sometimes very improbable) situations and locations, such as outer space. The artwork sometimes involves bondage or damsel-in-distress situations.
A strong influence on the movement was illustrator Rolf Armstrong (1889–1960), labeled the "Father of Good Girl Art" because of his creamy calendar art for Brown & Bigelow and iridescent illustrations for such magazines as ''American Weekly'', ''College Humor'', ''Life'', ''Judge'', ''Photoplay'', ''Pictorial Review'' and ''Woman's Home Companion'', along with his advertisements for Hires Root Beer, Palmolive, Pepsi, Oneida Silverware and other products.
During the peak period of comic book Good Girl Art, the 1940s to the 1950s, leading artists of the movement included Bill Ward (for his ''Torchy'') and Matt Baker. Arguably the king of Good Girl Art, Baker was one of the few African Americans working as an artist during the Golden Age of Comics. Today, Baker's rendition of Phantom Lady is considered a collectors item, and much of his GGA is sought after. During this period, GGA also found its way into newspaper comic strips. One of the early examples was Russell Stamm's Invisible Scarlet O'Neil, a superheroine who was regularly shown in her lingerie.
Two of the leading creators of GGA for science fiction magazine covers were Earle Bergey (''Startling Stories'', ''Thrilling Wonder Stories'') and Harold W. McCauley (''Imagination'', ''Fantastic Adventures''). In the '70's pulp fiction, Hector Garrido drew the GGA book covers of Baroness spy thriller series by Paul Kenyon and The Destroyer men's adventure pulp novels by Warren Murphy and Richard Sapir.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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