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Everything about Bob Peak totally explained

Robert "Bob" M. Peak (May 30 1927August 1 1992) was a pioneer in the development of the modern movie poster. His paintings and illustrations were enormously influential.
   His artwork has been on the cover of Time magazine, TV Guide, and Sports Illustrated. He also did many advertisements and even some stamps. Some of the movie posters he's done are: Apocalypse Now, Star Trek I to VI, Superman, West Side Story, Rollerball, My Fair Lady, Camelot and In Like Flint.
   One of the most imaginative and prolific illustrators of the 20th century, Robert Bob Peak (1927-1992) revolutionized advertising in the film industry and is considered the "Father of the modern movie poster." Robert Peak totally transformed the approach to movie advertising from basic collages of film stills or head shots to flamboyant artistic illustrations.
   Robert "Bob" M. Peak was born on the 30th of May 1927 in Denver Colorado. Peak grew up in Kansas. He knew from an early age that he wanted to be a commercial illustrator. He majored in geology from The Wichita State University and got a part time job in the art department of McCormick-Armstrong. That is where he gained the confidence to choose an art career and learned the skill of versatility-doing layout, illustration and lettering. After serving the military during the Korean War, Peak transferred to the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles and graduated in 1951. Peak also taught in his own college and later at Art Students League, New York and Famous Artists School.
   In 1953 Peak moved to New York, landed an Old Hickory Whiskey ad campaign, and from that point on his career skyrocketed. His work appeared in major advertising and national magazines. Sports Illustrated sent him on assignments throughout the world, including a safari to hunt ibex with the Shah of Iran. He received the largest commission of an individual artist from the U.S. Postal Service to design 30 stamps for the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles and 1984 Winter Olympics in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia.
   In 1961 Peak was named Artist of the Year by the Artists Guild of New York, and in 1977 the Society of Illustrators elected him to its Hall of Fame. He was the most in-demand, visible and copied illustrator for 50 years. For his outstanding contribution to the film industry, the Hollywood Reporter presented him the 1992 Key Art Lifetime Achievement Award.
   United Artist hired Peak in 1961 to help promote "West Side Story." His innovative solution-painting characters and scenes into a single montage-became the first of over 100 such posters, among them "My Fair Lady," "Camelot," "Rollerball," "Star Trek," "Superman" and "Apocalypse Now."
   He is considered as “the king of illustrators”. Peak's credits spread the gamut from fashion to sports, from postage stamps to fine art and through some of the most notable movie posters to have ever existed. Peak’s paintings and illustrations were enormously influential. His accounts include Time magazine, Coco Cola, TV Guide, Sports Illustrated and many more.
   He has illustrated approximately 75 films in all, as well as 45 covers for Time magazine. His awards, such as Artist of the Year award (Artist Guild of New York, 1961) and eight Awards of Excellence and four gold medals from Society of Illustrators attest to his reputation for excellence.

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