Skip to content
  • Home
  • Geezers Roll Call
  • Not Forgotten
  • Gatherings
  • Contact

Geezers’ Gallery

San Francisco's Golden Age of Advertising and the people who created it.

  • Home
    • Privacy Policy
  • Pages
    • Geezers Roll Call
    • Not Forgotten
  • Who was Where
    • Agencies
    • Copywriters
    • Photographic
    • Reps
    • Staff Creatives
    • Studios & Freelancers
    • Publications
  • Gatherings
    • Gathering 2024
    • Gathering 2022
    • Gathering 2021
    • Gathering 2020
    • Gathering 2019
    • Gathering 2018
    • Gathering 2017
    • Gathering 2016
    • Gathering 2015
    • Gathering 2014
    • Gathering 2013
    • Gathering 2012
    • Gathering 2011
    • Gathering 2010
    • Gathering 2009
    • Gathering 2008
    • Gathering 2007
    • Gathering 2006
    • Gathering 2005
    • Gathering 2004
    • Gathering 2003
    • Gathering 2002
    • Gathering 2001
    • Gathering 2000
    • Gathering 1999
    • Gathering 1993
  • Contact Us

“Last Minute, Brutal, Deadline”.

Posted on April 7, 2024April 7, 2024 By Hey You

My collec­tion of old layouts trig­gered a remem­bered assign­ment: ​“Last Minute, Brutal, Deadline”.
I found in my collec­tion a lot of layouts that were not mine. Before tossing them away, I thought I could reach the artists and send their samples on to them for their archives. Since they all were from my days working at VICOM / FCB HEALTHCARE, I would first to write to Art Director, Victor Marcelli.

On Mar 8, 2024, at 6:52?PM,
Hi Vic, It has been a long time! How are you? Richard and I are doing well. He is painting! I found a bunch of comps that are not mine. Could this be your art?
Annie

On 3/9/24 10:21 AM, Victor Marcelli wrote:
Hi Dick and Annie,
So good to hear from you two. Dick in the game is very inspi­ra­tional to me, water­color I’m guessing, that’s his mastery. You both are amazing masters at your craft, always mesmer­ized by watching you create marketing concept boards Annie, loose pencil, slip sheet or two, then Pris­ma­color sticks, you prob­ably went through dozens in every color and hundreds in Naprosyn Blue. Nice sketch you sent is not by me, are you sure it’s not by you?
Love to both of you.
-Victor

On Mar 9, 2024, at 10:51?AM. I wrote:
Hi, again, Vic,
So nice to get your reply. (and so flat­tering!) I remember your marker comps were more dramatic than my work (strong light and shadows) so I thought, if you used pencil, this example could be yours. I asked John Ruther­ford’s son, Steve, if this was John’s work. Steve said he couldn’t be sure.
I still have a great collec­tion of those Pris­ma­color sticks. I wonder if I could still handle them.
Yes, Dick is doing a water­color (at this moment) of an Azalea that we picked up at a local nursery. He jumps to it, when the light is good.
What are you up to?
Anni

3/9/24, 3:24 PM, from Vic
Four moves. Now living two blocks from your old school Santa Rosa HS. Through it all, I managed to paint some in oils, sold a few in galleries. Lot’s of portraits and some pro bono oil illus­tra­tions which found their way on to outdoor boards and SF City buses. My old comp’s contrast was due to felt markers. Remember Magic Marker bottles?
-Victor

3/9/24, 5:21 PM, (from me}
Vic — If you have made four moves, then you don’t still have the old Magic Markers.
I haven’t moved and so much has piled up.
We remember that you were the one to invite Dick and me to the Bohemian Grove, and you also invited Kirsten and myself to the down­town loca­tion to see your friend,Vince Perez, who was so great at anatomy illustration.
I would like to see the illus­tra­tions that you painted for SF boards and busses.

Magic Marker
Magic Marker 
Magic Marker
Magic Marker 
Full set Magic Markers
Full set Magic Markers 
Magic Marker colors
Magic Marker colors 
Magic Marker test
Magic Marker test 
Magic Marker
Magic Marker 
Prismacolor stick color
Pris­ma­color stick color 

(Attached is the good ol’ MM and a marker sketch that I made so many years ago. I never had the full set as shown. I imagine that it would have taken a lot of time picking each color and there was the need to keep the caps on and to keep them from acci­den­tally rolling down off the slanted drawing board.
After all these years, on 2−21−24 I tested my collec­tion to see which were still usable. (Every­thing is art!) Time to toss the last 19 Magic Markers, which are not useful without the full choice of colors. Now on the Mac, I can just click from a un-ending choice of colors, nothing dries up. Here, too, is a photo of what is left of my Pris­ma­color sticks. Still useable! They served me well. I would smear out their colors with Bestine!…another of the many toxics we worked with in those days.)

3/10/24, 1:50 AM, Vic sent
Annie,
​“Last Minute, Brutal, Deadline”
Here’s a memory from the past: I was down to the wire on a presen­ta­tion that Lester was going to present to Searle Pharma next morning in Skokie, North of Chicago, a branding proposal. Lester was already back there, I was in SF studio packing final boards with good old Billie at 10:PM night before. ​“Billie what’s this?”, she had snuck in two ColorAid sheets of the branding colors, an X‑acto knife and cutting mat, and handed me a can of spray mount. She said, ​“Vic, just in case”. I rushed it all to SFO, red eyed to O’Hare, then to Lester’s hotel where he was finishing break­fast, he said ​“Let’s go over the boards.” Every board had two stripes of brand colors across the bottom, navy & dayglow orange. He said: orange stripes need to be thinner! No table, I’m slicing strips of ColorAid on my hands and knees on bath­room floor, finished minutes before his taxi. Fortu­nately I was not in presen­ta­tion, which Lester sold bril­liantly I was told. I went to a motel exhausted, not before two stiff martini’s, and it was only noon. Maybe that’s why I have A.D.D. and how did Billie know?

Billie had a good eye, and knew Lester was a perfec­tionist. Truth is, Dayglo Orange was risky for the staid Searle marketing culture, their bold new drug deserved it’s bril­liance but it absolutely had to be trimmed and presented as an accent color. Lester made the right call.

3/11/24, 3:17 PM (from me}
Hi Vic,
It sure describes the tension of the ad biz. Should I tell it on Geezers’ Gallery?
Do you have more to tell? Did Billie go back to Texas?
We’d like to see your paint­ings and the bus and outdoor boards.
Ann
Vic sent his paint­ings and this commer­cial work:

Victor Marcelli
Victor Marcelli 
Victor Marcelli
Victor Marcelli 
Victor Marcelli
Victor Marcelli 
Victor Marcelli
Victor Marcelli 
Victor Marcelli
Victor Marcelli 
Victor Marcelli Bus-Outdoor boards
Victor Marcelli Bus-Outdoor boards 

3/17/24, 3:04 PM (from me)
Hi Vic, Me, again. Are either of these yours?
Annie

Smooth Color
Smooth Color 
Storyboard Layout
Story­board Layout 
Marker and Pencil
Marker and Pencil 

3/18/24, 10:54 AM
Hi Annie, no, those comps are not mine. Not sure the year exactly that I ceased to do marker comps, ​‘95? We used to call them photo indi­ca­tions, married them with type indi­ca­tions, loose squiggly lines or tight greeking. Remember the song ​“Video Killed the Radio Star”? Well the Mac killed the comp star. With some excep­tions like ​“Annie Boards”! Also, I’m guessing Dick carried that art form on, Skywalker? In my opinion concep­tual creativity abounds with the mind-to-hand sketch.
Victor

BTW (from me) (Dick was doing ​“back­grounds” for Colossal Pictures and George Lucas’s Skywalker, and layouts for others.)

3/18/24, 1:50 PM (from me)
Hi Vic,
I need some­thing to say about all of these anony­mous layout artists. Can i use what you just wrote?
Annie

3/18/24, 5:42 PM From Vic)
Of course Annie, and edit any way you see fit. In 1966 I worked with a group of seasoned AD’s that were still using layout chalks, Magic Marker’s were just coming in. These were the dusty chalks, they had all kinds of tricks with them and of course they had to be spray fixed. Between the chalk dust, fixa­tive and then spray mount it was pretty toxic. And then we’d put the work up, sit back and smoke! Damn lucky to have lived past forty.

3/18/24, 8:05 PM (from me)
I can use this, too,Vic.

(Regarding chalks — -I remember hearing stories of studio artists finding the back of their white shirts full of chalk dust from sitting in front of the ​“Chalk Artists”. Here are some that I attempted as a 19 year old student at CCSF. There were no sharp edges. Pencils were used to define edges. I imagine, now, that masking the subject would have given a cleaner edge. Chalks were just used for color, but messy.)

Poster for Dole
Poster for Dole 
Delicious things
Deli­cious things 
Dole 1 column ad A
Dole 1 column ad A 
Dole 1 column ad B
Dole 1 column ad B 

Tue, 19 Mar 2024 (from me)
Hi Lester—
I recently was in touch with Vic Marcelli and this is his descrip­tion of those times.
I could put this in Geezers’ Gallery along with a story of the paper layouts of the day, with samples. Do you know the artist for these samples?
Annie
(I showed Les, more samples.)

3/24/24 6:35 PM
From Lester, VICOM/FCB HEALTHCARE’s Creative Director:
Ann,
Thanks for the reminder. I’ve been immersed in preparing a lecture I’m giving on Tuesday. Sorry.
The Vic Marcelli story was wonderful…though a bit embar­rassing. Billie was so right in sending the kit. I wasn’t going to change anything, but we could not show a strong accent color with the same weight as the base color. It would not have made the cut with the client. A little adjust­ment and it was sold.
And of course you can use it.
Continued joy with your wonderful work. Hugs, Les

PS FYI, the lecture is on the histo­ries of Art Nouveau and Art Deco. A lot of fun, but rather time-consuming. Here’s a slide for your plea­sure. I think these two gates tell the design differ­ence with clarity.
Thank you, Vic and Lester.

We three

Ann
Below is more of the collec­tion: Some assign­ments, such as TV story­boards (that require so very many images) don’t usually need tight details, just quick images. When details are needed, the layout must be a tight illus­tra­tion as the use of lettering as shown.Also layouts that plan for photo shoots, with many people in various poses, requirer pencil draw­ings showing costume, atti­tudes, furni­ture, etc. which provides the plan for the photographer(s).

Smooth color Layout
Smooth color Layout 
Dr. Color
Dr. Color 
Anonymous Layout Art
Anony­mous Layout Art 
Detailed Layout
Detailed Layout 
Detailed Layout
Detailed Layout 
Detailed Layout
Detailed Layout 
Detailed Layout
Detailed Layout 
Detailed Layout
Detailed Layout 
Storyboard Layout
Story­board Layout 
Storyboard Layout
Story­board Layout 
Storyboard Layout
Story­board Layout 
Storyboard Layout
Story­board Layout 
Storyboard Layout
Story­board Layout 
Storyboard Layout
Story­board Layout 
Pencil Layout
Pencil Layout 
Pencil Layout
Pencil Layout 
Pencil Layout
Pencil Layout 

If the mystery layout artists don’t claim their artwork…these layouts might go the way of the Magic Markers — (but thinking, now) they take so little room and I admire the work, I can just move them out of ​“my collec­tion” into my ​“Geezer collection”.

Ann Thompson.


Geezerpedia, Of That Time, Recollections

Post navigation

Previous Post: Chaos In The Jelly Factory
Next Post: From Concept to Completion

Artist's Sites

  • Bill and Nina Stewart
  • Bill Cone
  • Bill Schwob art
  • Bob Bausch
  • Bruce Lauritzen
  • Bruce Wolfe
  • Bryn Craig
  • Caleb Whitbeck
  • Charles Pyle
  • Chris Blum
  • Chuck Eckart
  • Darren Hanshaw
  • Dave Broad
  • Fred Lyon
  • Gale McKee
  • Hans Halberstadt
  • Jack Allen
  • James Propp
  • Janet Jones
  • Jeff Leedy
  • Jerry Huff
  • Jim Stitt
  • John Mattos
  • Kirk Henderson
  • Larry Keenan
  • Lowell Herrero
  • Marc Ericksen
  • Mark Keller
  • Mark Schroeder
  • Mik Kitagawa
  • Robert Arnold
  • Robert Evans
  • Robert Gantt Steele
  • Roger Shelly
  • Stan Dann
  • Stephen Rutherford
  • Tom Whitworth
  • Ward Schumaker

Artist Galleries

  • Tom Watson
  • Keehn Gray
  • John Pratt
  • Chuck Eckart
  • Jerry Huff
  • Al Davidson
  • Bill Nellor
  • Jim Stitt Designs

Copy Writers

  • Joel Fugazzotto
  • Samm Coombs
  • Todd Miller

Still In The Game

  • Bill and Nina Stewart
  • Bill Schwob work
  • Chris Blum
  • Darren Hanshaw
  • David Johnson
  • Fred Lyon
  • Hans Halberstadt
  • Jack Tom
  • James Propp
  • Jeff Leedy
  • Jim Stitt
  • John Mattos
  • Kirk Henderson
  • Lars Melander
  • Marc Ericksen
  • Mark Keller
  • Mark Schroeder
  • Peter Thompson
  • Robert Arnold
  • Robert Holmes
  • Rory Phoenix
  • Scott Simpkin
  • Stephen Rutherford
  • Steve Rustad
  • Tom Whitworth
  • Ward Schumaker

Places We Like

  • Patterson Hall Early History
  • Piet Halberstadt
  • Printing Films
  • The Museum of Forgotten Art Supplies

Copyright © 2025 Geezers’ Gallery.

Powered by PressBook Premium theme