
J. C. Leyendecker
Joseph Christian Leyendecker (1874–1951) was a pioneering American illustrator and painter who defined the visual culture of early 20th-century America. As the most prolific cover artist in Saturday Evening Post history, he created 322 covers between 1907 and 1943, shaping the nation's aesthetic sensibilities for over four decades. He is best celebrated for creating the iconic "Arrow Collar Man," a sophisticated gentleman figure that became one of the most successful advertising characters in American history. Leyendecker's elegant, dramatic style, deeply influenced by European Art Nouveau, established him as a bridge between Victorian illustration and modern commercial art, profoundly influencing his protégé Norman Rockwell and generations of American artists.







