Elias Howe Inventor of the Sewing Machine (Original)
Medium: Gouache on Board
Size: 19" x 8" (490mm x 210mm)
Date: 1981
Code: CotonSewingLL
This is the unique original Gouache painting by Graham Coton.
Despite inventing the sewing machine, Elias Howe nearly died in penury, in fact his wife died of malnutrition as other people made money on the back of his success. It was only when he managed to patent the device that he secured a lasting income.
Graham Coton's painting shows an early version of the machine being tested for speed against a group of seamstresses. Elias Howe won that competition by a clear half hour.
Original artwork from The Look and Learn Book 1981, although originally created for issue 504 of the weekly magazine, 11th September 1971.
- Artist BiographyGraham Coton (1 December 1926 - 14 October 2003; Woolwich, London, UK)
Graham Coton's artistic metier was the Second World War. Born in Woolwich, London, he was largely self-taught and attended the Goldsmith's College of Art in London, which he says was a "disaster", and his education was interrupted during World War II. He served in the R.A.F. from 1944 and in 1946/1947 he was working there as a Physical Instructor.
He began freelancing for Amalgamated Press in the early 1950s. Although he started as a strip artist by drawing Kit Carson for Cowboy Comics Library and later drew four short strips for the Thriller Comics Library (an adventure of Gulliver for no. 5, a Dick Turpin strip for no. 8 and two Three Musketeer strips in issues 12 and 26), it was not until he started drawing Captain Phantom, the World War II Master Spy, for Knockout in 1953, that he really came into his own. Some of these strips were later reprinted in Thriller Comics Library with the lead character renamed Spy 13.
Coton was very much a new force in comics when he first appeared, bringing with him a violent, ultra-tough approach. Coton also created the strip Space Family Rollinson in the early 1950s which was reprinted in France, Germany, Italy and Portugal.
Coton's two short Musketeer strips are interesting mainly for their story lines- particularly the reunion with Aramis in Musketeers Ride Again (no. 26) - for the artwork is not really in tune with the swashbuckling genre.
Coton will be mainly remembered as far as comic art is concerned for his car racing strips in Tiger, his superb war strips in Top Spot and, most of all, for his dynamic covers for the War and Battle Picture Libraries.
Besides his work for the comics, Coton did artwork for numerous magazines, books, Royal Doulton commemorative plates, Readers Digest and book jackets, among other things. He also did commissions that were numerous and varied, from portraits, to animals, pets, landscapes, seascapes, trains, planes and automobiles. He died on 14th October 2003 at his home in East Sussex.
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