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Patterson & Sullivan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Patterson & Sullivan
IndustryArt Services
Founded1921; 103 years ago (1921)
Founder
    • J.E. Patterson
    • Ray Sullivan
Successor
    • P&H Creative Group
    • Patterson & Hall
Headquarters,
Websitephcreative.com

Patterson & Sullivan (P&S) was an art service based in San Francisco in the 1920s and 1930s. In addition to their illustration services, P&S employed a staff of graphic and packaging designers as well as typographers, calligraphic artists and photographers.

History

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J.E. Patterson and Ray Sullivan founded the San Francisco based art service Patterson & Sullivan in 1921.[citation needed] They provided illustration services for the local advertising agencies such as Lord & Thomas, McCann Erickson, BBD&O, Young & Rubicam and J. Walter Thompson. By the mid-1920s, P&S was attracting many of the country's leading illustrators including John Atherton, Stan Galli, Paul Carey, Jack Painter, Haines Hall, Gib Darling and Amado Gonzalez. These artists were able to supply a wide range of illustration styles evidenced in their campaigns for clients such as Southern Pacific Railroad, Dole Food Company, Del Monte Corporation, Levi Strauss & Co., Stanford University, Standard Oil, Matson Lines and Dollar Steamship Lines.

Patterson & Sullivan becomes Patterson & Hall

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The studio's key artist in 1939 was William Haines Hall, who had joined the firm in 1925. Alton Painter and Haines Hall were members of the Thirteen Watercolorists (founded by Maynard Dixon and Maurice Logan). Hall was also a member of the Bohemian Club, producing posters and portraits for various events. When fellow Patterson & Sullivan employee John Atherton won a $500 first place in the 1929 Bohemian Club art show, Atherton moved to New York and invited Hall to visit. While in New York, Hall met many of the illustrators of the day, including Norman Rockwell and Robert Fawcett, whose sister he would later marry. When Sullivan left P&S in 1939, Haines Hall replaced him as partner in the firm. This led to a change in the art agency's name from Patterson & Sullivan to Patterson & Hall in 1939.[citation needed] It was subsequently changed once more in 1999 from Patterson & Hall to P&H Creative Group which is still in business.

References

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  • Patterson & Sullivan Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. February, 1927: 36.
  • Hasty, John Eugene. "Confessions of a Yes-Man." Western Advertising and Western Business. January, 1928: 62–63.
  • Matson Line Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. January, 1928: 109.
  • "Modernistic Poster Designs." Western Advertising and Western Business. March, 1929: 79.
  • Ellis, Lynn. "Make a Score-Card Boss the Text." Western Advertising and Western Business. May, 1929: 64.
  • Four Label Designs. Western Advertising and Western Business. 1 August 1929: 95.
  • Patterson & Sullivan Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. 5 September 1929: 131.
  • Hasty, John Eugene. "The Trend in Trends." Western Advertising and Western Business. 3 October 1929: 50–52.
  • Hasty, John Eugene. "Position Wanted." Western Advertising and Western Business. 7 November 1929: 43–45.
  • Patterson & Sullivan Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. February, 1930: 134–135.
  • Patterson & Sullivan Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. March, 1930: 109.
  • Patterson & Sullivan Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. June, 1930: 22.
  • Dameron, Kenneth. "What Is Behind the Urge to Merge?" Western Advertising and Western Business. 7 August 1930: 25–27.
  • Patterson & Sullivan Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. 7 August 1930: 84.
  • Patterson & Sullivan Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. January, 1931: 64.
  • Patterson & Hall Advertisement. Western Advertising and Western Business. November, 1948: 102.
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