Pulp & Men's Magazines

A Covered Wagon Confrontation
Artist:Jerome Rozen
Date:1927
Medium:Oil on Stretched Canvas
Dimensions:Sight size 21" X 30" framed 25" X 34"
Condition:Excellent
Original Use:Cover for Popular Stories Pulp Magazine; June 7, 1927
Price:$6500.00
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Above: Full view of oil painting

Above: The artist's signature lower left

Above: Detail


An important early cover painting by Jerome Rozen for the June 7, 1927 long running twice monthly adventure pulp title "Popular Stories." This painting combines Westward Ho, covered wagon western Americana imagery with civil war drama, in a vaguely historical scene with intensely powerful imagery. The depiction, in the strong color blocks for which the pulps were famed, features a confederate soldier menacing an elderly African American slave and sympathetic young damsel who are attempting to flee unspoken horrors through the desolate prairie.

Above: Framed in an old and likely original soft pine wood simple frame

Above: Verso view of original pine stretchers and old canvas with one professionally repaired canvas tear


The verso pine stretchers have pencil notations that read "June 7, 1927 Popular".

Above: Verso notations on pine back stretcher


The Popular Magazine was a very successful and long running Street & Smith publication that was essentially adventure based stories for what the publishers referred to "as common people". In 1903 The Popular Magazine was launched, and was billed as the "biggest magazine in the world" (by virtue of being two pages longer than Argosy). The Popular Magazine introduced the use of color covers to the pulp world, Harvey Dunn, Edgar Wittmack and Jerome Rozen were among artists that created covers for the title.

Above: Another example of a Jerome Rozen cover for this title

Above: Another example of a Jerome Rozen cover for this title

Above: Another example of a Jerome Rozen cover for this title


The twin brother of illustrator George Rozen, Jerome Rozen became a well-known pulp illustrator. Both of the boys showed early art talent.

For health reasons before World War I, he and his brother as teenagers with the other members of the immediate family moved to Flagstaff, Arizona. In World War I, Jerome served in Europe where he visited many art galleries. He enrolled in the Art Institute of Chicago where he became a teacher, and his students included his brother who came a year later. Some of his early illustrations were for Boy's Life and The Popular Magazine as early as 1927, and Battle Stories by 1928.

Jerome Rozen and his wife, Della Kretchmar, moved to the Bronx where he opened a studio and became a highly successful pulp artist and illustrator, getting early attention for his cover work illustrating "The Shadow" written by Walter Gibson and published by Street and Smith.

His wife was killed in an auto accident, and he was severely injured, but he lived to age 92. In his later years, photography replaced his interest in illustration.


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