| Donlad
Moss (1920 - )
The first issue of "Sports
Illustrated" appeared on newsstands, August 14, 1954, and
Don Moss’ first assignment as a free lance artist for
“S.I.” came a month later. He painted in many styles
across a wide spectrum of sports for a variety of editorial
commissions until his final cover, “What’s Wrong
With the NFL,” on November 12, 1984.
From an early age, growing up in Melrose, Massachusetts, Don
loved challenges, whether it be on a hockey rink or climbing
Mount Washington’s steep, unforgiving Huntington Ravine
in a 100 mile per hour September sleet storm. His drawing ability
went as far back as his love of sports, materializing in high
school posters and a scholarship to Vesper George, a (then)
noted Boston art school.
After serving in the Marines during World War II, he moved
to New York City and honed his art career with "Esquire",
"Collier’s", "Elks Magazine" and New
York’s advertising agencies. His sentimental favorite
from his thirty years with "Sports Illustrated" was
his first cover -- for the Kentucky Derby, May 4, 1964. Dick
Gangel, "Sports Illustrated" art director, liked his
artist-reporters to experience their assignments. Thus, Don
skied the trails he painted from a racer’s point of view,
holed out many a putt on famous golf courses after an eight
iron shot to the green, photographed tennis players like Jimmy
Connors, and had drinks with National Hockey League stars after
motor-drive camera shots of their action on ice for a series
of acrylics of famous hockey players.
Gangel recognized Don Moss’ interest in a broad range
of painting styles from detailed realism to pointillism, from
pop art to surreal. These were all represented in the 85-piece
retrospective of his work that the National Art Museum of Sport
organized in 1996. It was later exhibited at the Society of
Illustrators in New York and several New England museums. Today
Don Moss and his wife Sally live in Farmington, Connecticut,
where he continuous to paint, adding the beautiful Farmington
River valley to his subject matter.
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