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St. Louis Magazine - July, 2009
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In This Issue

Features

A-List 2009 Table of Contents (July 2009) From the Editor: All-Star Month The Green Scene: LEEDing the Way The Green Scene: Campus Kudos The Green Scene: A Tale of Two Rivers The Green Scene: Food That Hits Home The Green Scene: The ABCs of CSAs The Green Scene: The Electric (Car) Company The Green Scene: And You’re Worried About Your Water Bottle? Why We Aren't (Ballpark) Village People Behind the Scenes Being Buck Web Exclusive: Buck's Best The Green Scene: Green Around the Collar The Green Scene: Seeing Green

Departments

The Buzz: The Ringer The Buzz: Raiding Lake Saint Louis First Shot: Match Point The Buzz: An (Extended) All-Star Lineup What It's Like to Orchestrate Fireworks The Buzz: The Rose That Grew From Concrete Things We Love: Red, White & New Stylish Subtleties: Jeff Orbin Shop Talk: Ace of Spade Feedback Out & About: Studio 360 First Stop: Museum of Western Expansion Cameo: Graphic Content Liquid Assets: Thirsting for Wine Knowledge? Rose Revisits: Riddles Penultimate Café & Wine Bar Review: Niche: Carving Its Own... First Look: Bar Oliver Kitchen Q&A: Tony and Kelli Almond Flashback: 1911 A Conversation with Bill McClellan

Departments

Scenes from the MLB All-Star Game
2009.11.21 - 2009 Beaujolais Nouveau Celebration
 Join us at our intimate French-American Bistro for a 2009 Beaujolais...
2009.11.28 - Mount Pleasant presents "Lucy Goes Cruisin" Murder Mystery Dinner Theater
Join Mount Pleasant for an evening of uproarious whodunit as only Lucy...
2009.12.03 - "GIFTED" Original Art for Holiday Giving
Skip the malls this year and make your gift giving a unique expression of...
2009.12.03 - Holiday Rooms in Bloom
The Historic Samuel Cupples House on the campus of Saint Louis University is...

Cameo: Graphic Content

Every three months, this Shaw resident has a brush with greatness—in oil, India ink, and other media.

Cameo: Graphic Content
Photograph by Nick Schnelle

Daniel Zimmer’s stately two-story brownstone could have served as the backdrop for a Norman Rockwell canvas—and frankly, that seems apt, given Zimmer’s role in crafting Illustration, a quarterly magazine devoted to classic illustrators.

“I was always really interested in old-fashioned illustrators, and the amount of information about those guys is very limited,” Zimmer relates in his tidy home studio. “I always thought, ‘I wish there were a whole magazine devoted to illustrators.’” Eventually, he resolved to launch just such a magazine, and Illustration debuted late in 2001.

That first issue featured a lead story on painter Haddon Hubbard Sundblom, whose Coca-Cola ad art effectively visualized Santa Claus as Americans nowadays know the character. Since then, Illustration has covered artists ranging from Conan/Tarzan titan Frank Frazetta to women’s-magazine wonder Al Parker.

After coming of age in Kirkwood, Zimmer attended Parsons, the distinguished Greenwich Village design school. Then, when New York proved characteristically unwelcoming, he returned here to seek an art-based career. (His first published graphic? A gouache for the September 1990 SLM.)

His training has since served him well in producing Illustration, now on its 27th issue. “I design everything,” he notes. “I do all the photo retouching, do all layouts. I pack every box.” Zimmer also commissions photographers and, for obvious reasons, obsesses about the quarterly’s reproduction quality, all in service to the labor-of-love stories submitted to him by freelance writers. (“A lot of the articles in the magazine sometimes take years to develop,” he confides.)



Zimmer estimates Illustration’s print run at 10,000 copies per issue, with 1,000 subscribers, and those numbers have stayed stable despite the recession. Moreover, the magazine’s subscription roll includes a number of celebs—George Lucas, to name one. “Tony Bennett has been a subscriber since the very beginning,” Zimmer also notes. “Before he was a singer, he was wanting to be an illustrator.”

Barnes & Noble, Borders, and other national booksellers carry Illustration, as do comics shops like Star Clipper locally. Otherwise, says Zimmer, “It goes everywhere—from Indonesia to China, one guy in Russia, all over the place.”

Among his own favorite illustrators, finally, Zimmer names longtime Saturday Evening Post cover artist J.C. Leyendecker, as well as Norman Saunders and Reynold Brown (about whom his Illustrated Press just published lovely hardbacks). Oh—and he also expresses fondness for a gent named Rockwell.

For more information about Illustration and The Illustrated Press, visit illustration-magazine.com or call 314-577-6768. A four-issue subscription to the magazine costs $60.