Friday, March 14, 2014

Matt Fox (1906-1988)-Part 1

Matthew Fox
Illustrator, Cartoonist, Comic Book Artist, Advertising Artist, Graphic Artist, Painter
Born November 8, 1906, New York, New York
Died February 20, 1988, West Haven, Connecticut

Update (August 28, 2018): I have heard from David Saunders, son of the pulp artist Norm Saunders and author of the website Field Guide to Wild American Pulp Artists. Mr. Saunders has just recently completed a biography of Matt Fox. You can read it by clicking here. In reading David Saunders' biography, I find that my speculations on Matt Fox are just plain wrong. I've lined through those parts below. I plan on completing this two-part series on Matt Fox at a later date. In the meantime, I ask that the anonymous commenter (below) who has photographs of Matt Fox contact me, as David Saunders is interested in posting a photo on his website.

Original article with lines through speculations:

Little is known of Matt Fox. Most of what you'll find on the Internet is recycled from one or two sources. The Wikipedia entry is cribbed from Art in Time: Unknown Comic Book Adventures, 1940-1980 by Dan Nodel (2010). To its credit, The Internet Speculative Fiction Database lists Fox's birthdate, birthplace, and death date. At least somebody somewhere did some original research. The Connecticut Death Index says he never married. If that's the case, it's unlikely that he had children. Matt Fox may very well have died alone, as is the fate of so many artists, including Hugh Rankin, Hannes Bok, and Wally WoodThere may not have been anyone to carry on his memory. Fortunately, we are beginning to remember him now.

I know this much: Matt Fox was born on November 8, 1906, in New York City. I'm afraid I can't confirm the names of his parents, although I have candidates. The best candidates I have found were residents of Atlantic City, New Jersey. On a blog called Potrzebie, the author, named Bhob, recalls meeting Matt Fox in North Bergen, New Jersey, at the home of Calvin Beck, publisher of the magazine Castle of Frankenstein. That was in the mid-1960s. If North Bergen was close to home for Matt Fox, then maybe he was the same Matt Fox enumerated in the U.S. Census in Atlantic City in 1910, 1930, and 1940. If they were one in the same, then Matt Fox the artist was the son of Matthew Fox, Sr., a bricklayer, and his wife, named Fannie. And, if the same Matt Fox was living in Atlantic City in 1940 and working as a painter, then he was married after all. His wife was named Kathleen.

That's a lot of speculation. I'll continue with some facts from an entry, written by Fox himself, in The Who's Who of American Comic Books, edited by Jerry Bails (1971):
*MATTHEW (MATT) FOX (1906- ) Artist. Major influence: Alex Raymond; Cartoons; Adv art; Lithographs; Pulp illus; Covers of Weird Tales (oils), Color woodcuts; Water colors; Oil paintings; Etchings, Comic book credits: (p) & (i). Youthful: (1952-3) fantasy; Marvel: (1952-6) horror, s-f; (1962-3) s-f, fantasy.
The asterisk indicates that Fox wrote the entry himself. (P = pencils, i = inks, s-f = science fiction.) That may be as much as what is generally known of Matt Fox.

So Fox was a cartoonist, illustrator, comic book artist, advertising artist, watercolorist, painter, and graphic artist, with lithographs, woodcuts, and etchings to his credit. He worked in those fields from the early 1940s into the 1960s. I don't know of any original art published after the 1960s, unless his work for Marvel Comics in the 1970s was original rather than reprinted. (Fox's work was reprinted as early as the 1970s and as recently as this decade.) There isn't any mention of schooling. I suspect that Matt Fox was self taught, for his work is primitive, not in a crude way, but with real primitive power. (Jack Kirby, another artist of great power, was also more or less a primitive artist.) Although he claimed Alex Raymond as an influence, the look and technique of his art is far removed from the slick, dry-brush (Flash Gordon) or pen-and-ink (Rip Kirby) style of Raymond. Fox's art reminds me of no one's so much as that of Basil Wolverton (1909-1978). Fletcher Hanks (1887-1976) might also be put in the same category of un-categorizable artists. (1)

Matt Fox served eleven months in the U.S. Army, from January 13 to December 13, 1943. According to The Internet Speculative Fiction Database, Fox's first drawings in the genres of fantasy and science fiction were published during those eleven months. They included his first interior illustration for Weird Tales, in March 1943. His first cover followed a year and a half later, in November 1944, just in time for Fox's thirty-eighth birthday.

To be continued . . .

Note
(1) Like so many artists before him, Fletcher Hanks died alone. His frozen body was found on a park bench in New York City.

Original text copyright 2014, 2023 Terence E. Hanley

8 comments:

  1. I knew Matthew Fox and have pictures of him when he lived on my block in The Bronx. Knew he drew gargoyles etc but didn't know he was associated with Marvel comics til after his passing. To me , he was simply Grandpa Fox who smoked his pipe lol. Interesting finding out about his earlier works....

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I purchased a painting done by him about a year or two ago from an auction. Would be so cool to know more about him as I cant find anything like it elsewhere.

      Delete
    2. Dear Anonymous,

      David Saunders has asked me to ask you to contact me regarding the photographs of Matt Fox that you mentioned. Mr. Saunders would like to post a photo on his website. I'm sure many others would be interested to see pictures of him as well.

      Thanks.

      Terence Hanley
      Tellers of Weird Tales

      Delete
  2. Please ask ANONYMOUS commentator of April 4, 2018 to provide copies of all photos he has of Matthew Fox. It would be an important document to share with the art-loving public!

    ReplyDelete
  3. How can I contact you ?

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Dear Anonymous,

      You may send me an email message at the following address:

      info@hooisercartoonists.com

      I look forward to hearing from you.

      Terence Hanley

      Delete
  4. Just curious what a photo would be worth ? They're personal to me.
    Hmmmm

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Hi, Anonymous,

      I see now that I misspelled my email address. It should be:

      info@hoosiercartoonists.com

      I'm not looking to buy a photograph of Matt Fox, but I can't speak for anyone else. If you would like to get in touch with me anyway, please email me. Thanks.

      TH

      Delete