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		<TITLE>Coles Phillips Biography</TITLE>
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					<IMG SRC="images/phillips.gif" ALIGN="LEFT" WIDTH="300" HEIGHT="394" VALIGN="0" HALIGN="0" VSPACE="10" HSPACE="10" BORDER="1"><BR>
        <FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE="2" FACE="HELVETICA,ARIAL"> <font face="Times New Roman, Times, serif">The 
        Fadeaway Girl was the particular hallmark of <B>COLES PHILLIPS (1880-1927)</B>. 
        Phillips pictured fashionable young women, using the device of tying the 
        figure into the background by either color, value or pattern. This approach 
        produced an intriguing poster-like effect of great simplicity, yet it 
        was based on the most careful preliminary planning of shapes to carry 
        out the illusion of the full figure.<BR>
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        The idea of the fade-away leaves the viewer to fill in the extra information 
        toward completion of the picture. Fade-away also had the effect of placing 
        beauty in the imagination. The filling-in of Phillips's flattened outlines 
        meant the viewer was allowed to think and imagine, rather than simply 
        to look. When <I>Life Magazine</I> began to use color on its covers in 
        1908, the Fadeaway Girl made her initial appearance and was an instant 
        success. For many years thereafter she appeared in a variety of guises, 
        but was always the patrician beauty.<BR>
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        In April 1928, ten months after Phillips died, <I>The Saturday Evening 
        Post</I> published "The Making of an Illustrator" by his widow, Teresa 
        Hyde Phillips. Of the artist's inspiration Teresa wrote, 'His arrangements 
        of the masses, small and large, were to him much more exciting than the 
        color or the idea, or whether the girl was pretty. Pure design, in other 
        words, was his real love, and the fact that he made his reputation as 
        a painter of pretty girls was more an accident than anything else.'"<BR>
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        Phillips prided himself on being a good businessman-artist. His pictures, 
        both for magazine covers and for advertising compaigns such as Holeproof 
        Hosiery and Palmolive, were the product of a meticulous, cerebral craftsman. 
        When he was interviewed in 1915, he expressed his belief that "illustrating, 
        whether of the commercial or highbrow kind, is profitable only when you 
        do your best all the time." For Phillips, his "best" translated to a sophisticated 
        style that helped change America's perception of beauty.<BR>
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          <font color="#000000" size="2" face="Times New Roman, Times, serif"> 
          <B>["The Magic Hour", Oneida Community Plate advertisement, 1924, gouache 
          &amp; watercolor 20.5 x 15.5"]</B> </font><FONT COLOR="#000000" SIZE="2" FACE="HELVETICA,ARIAL">	
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