It could be another Pulp Monday but I opted for Pin-Up Monday.

Seems more appropriate for this particular morning. Besides, Marcus finds the concept intriguing. And the artist whose works were enormously popular in 1940s hasn't been featured here yet. Here's his biography as told by BPIB:
Joaquin Alberto Vargas y Chavez was born in Peru in 1896. His father was a successful photographer. In 1911 he went to Paris with his brother and father. The boys were on their way to Switzerland for schooling and eventual apprenticeships, but the Paris stopover changed Alberto's life forever. There he "discovered" his two great artistic idols: Ingres and Raphael Kirchner. Kirchner was a premier artist for La Vie Parisienne and as famous in France as Harrison Fisher and Charles Dana Gibson were in America. Vargas was profoundly influenced by his technique and his approach to the female figure.
Kirchner postcard (via FrankLong @ Flickr)
Vargas was summoned to England in 1916 to begin his apprenticeship with a major English photography house. With World War One swirling around him, he found it impossible to get from Paris to London. It was, however, feasible to get to America and then back to Peru, so he headed for home. He didn't make it.
In New York, he began retouching photographs for a living and drawing and painting. Kirchner and Russell Flint were the men who influenced him the most at this period, especially Kirchner's paintings for the Ziegfeld Follies. Kirchner died in 1917 and Florenz Ziegfeld found Vargas doing a painting exhibition in a window display promotion in 1919. Vargas became the primary Ziegfeld artist for a dozen years, painting portraits of all the stars of each season's Broadway extravaganza. Perhaps it was from Ziegfeld that Vargas developed the tone of his art - the idealized depiction of the female form glorified but never vulgarized. Sensuality was everything, but the sex was never blatant. (Many years later he would find it almost physically impossible to produce a Playboy image with full frontal nudity - so ingrained was his respect for his subjects.)
The Ziegfeld images could have no bare breasts, yet throughout the twenties, Vargas created several very exotic nude paintings. It is probable that these were done to supplement the money that he was surely earning - and spending with wild abandon. When he eloped with his wife, Anna Mae, in 1930, he had to borrow the money to pay for the marriage license. Vargas was never a very successful business man and when the Follies work ended in 1931, he scoured the country for income.
One goddess, two moral codes: 1922 painting of Diana revised in 1930
(The picture, along with the two above, has been deleted upon our hosting company request. Welcome back to 1930s, hail to the Hays Production Code!)
Much of the decade was spent in low-paying positions in the art departments of various Hollywood studios. As the decade drew to a close, Vargas faced desperate times. He was in New York and his wife was still in California. Work was almost non-existent.
A portrait of Ann Sheridan, 1939
Then, in an eerie echo of his replacing Kirchner at the Ziegfeld Follies, Esquire hired him to replace George Petty (another artist worth a Monday Special - L.K.) Vargas was indentured for three years at $75 a week with Esquire as his sole client and Esquire would take 50% of the monies gained from any sale of Vargas artwork. In 1944, under a new contract, Vargas produced almost a painting a week at the princely sum of $1000 a month. And the paintings were simply gorgeous.

Vargas and Esquire were so popular with G.I.s in World War Two. Actually, though, it was "Varga" who was popular. The name had been shortened to make it appear more exotic. In the ensuing acrimonious lawsuits between Vargas and Smart, it was revealed that Esquire had patented the name "Varga" - under which Alberto had developed his reputation. Of course, the patent was requested and granted in 1946 immediately after Vargas brought suit against Esquire to break the contract that bound him exclusively to the magazine until 1957.
He won the first round, but while the decision was under appeal, he was enjoined from using the "Varga" name. In 1950, the decision was reversed with Esquire owning the name. "Varga" was dead and "Vargas" had to raise himself from the ashes.
The early Fifties found Vargas playing cards, some starlet paintings in True Magazine, and other minor efforts. From 1954 to 1957 he had a monthly feature in an obscure British men's magazine. A pictorial in Playboy in 1957 and trip home to Peru in 1958 provided much-needed emotional succor, but the late Fifties were a time of no work. Vargas used the time to perfect his skills and when, in 1960, Hugh Hefner hired him to paint foldout nudes for Playboy he was ready.
At the age of 64, when most people are considering the notion of retirement, Vargas began a new career that would finally give him the respect and financial security he merited. He worked for Playboy for 16 years during which time he produced 152 paintings. Many of them were masterpieces, but the constant need to create a glamourous painting of a sexy 19 year old month after month often resulted in some formulaic and occasionally perfunctory work.
He retired in 1976. In 1978, with Reid Austin, he wrote Vargas, a compelling tale of his life profusely illustrated with rare and classic and even some previously unseen images. He died in 1982.
(More detailed biography of Vargas can be found on The Pin-Up Files)
Headline picture: Jane Russell in The Outlaw (1943) by Alberto Vargas
Special thanks to the Golden Age Comic Book Stories.
There are 59 Varga girls in our new album (NSFW!). You're welcome to browse it or to enjoy the slideshow:
© 2013 Created by Tome Wilson.
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