Illustration work showcasing the American worker of yesteryear by Robert Gunn
From top to bottom: "The Landman", "The Geologist" and "The Paper Albatross". "Stakin' the Well" and 'The Duster"

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Illustration work showcasing the American worker of yesteryear by Robert Gunn
From top to bottom: "The Landman", "The Geologist" and "The Paper Albatross". "Stakin' the Well" and 'The Duster"
Housewife with side hustle styling hair at home
(Ralph Crane. n.d.)
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George Rozen, cover for "Argosy" magazine, Feb 1939
I genuinely love the point of view of this cover so much. You have to put yourself in this time period when there was no television or CGI. Coming up with this perspective, angle and shot to showcase a construction worker swinging from a crane is a thing of pure genius. One more reason to love pulp art.
Robert Gunn, "Makin' a Trip"
Robert Gunn, "Freedom"
Robert Gunn, "Freedom"
Plight of the American Worker
The Disconnect of Wealthy Democrats in Congress: Ignoring Workers In the hallowed halls of Congress, where the will of the American people is supposed to find its voice, a troubling reality has taken root: the Democratic Party, long heralded as the champion of the working class, is increasingly dominated by millionaires who have little in common with the average American worker. This growing…