Anton Otto Fischer (1882-1962)
Anton Otto Fischer was born in Munich, Germany,
on February 23, 1882. He was orphaned at an early
age and reared in an orphanage. At the age of fifteen
he ran away when he was forced to study for the priesthood
and became a printer's devil. He soon left this job
and ran away to sea.
Fischer was at sea for eight
years, except for a fourteen-month period in 1905-06
when he worked for A.B. Frost, a well-known artist,
as a model and general handyman. This experience
prompted Fischer to take up the study of art seriously,
and in October of 1906 he went to Paris to study
at the Académie Julian under Jean Paul Laurens.
He studied there for two years, spending his summers
painting landscapes in Normandy. Fischer returned
to the United States in January 1908 to take up illustration
and landscape painting. Attracted by the fame of
Howard Pyle, he came to Wilmington from New York
City in 1908 and established a studio at 1110 Franklin
Street. He freelanced in "subject pictures" ¬ paintings
telling a human interest story. Subject pictures
were very popular in this era and were used for magazine
covers as well as full and double spread illustrations.
In 1910, Fischer moved back to New York and received
his big break: he was asked to illustrate a story
by Jack London in Everybody's Magazine. He continued
to illustrate many of London's magazine stories and
books until London's death in 1916. By 1912 he was
in great demand as an illustrator. From 1909 to 1920
he produced more than one thousand illustrations
covering a variety of subjects: pretty girls, women
and babies, dogs and horses, the tropics, the far
North, the West, city and country life, the Navy,
the sports world, and the sea.
Fischer returned to
Wilmington briefly in 1932 but soon moved back to
New York. With his wife, an artist in her own right,
and his daughter, Fischer moved to Woodstock, New
York, in 1938, where he continued to produce illustrations
but also began working on oil paintings for his book
Foc's'le Days. In 1942 he was asked to serve as official
war artist by the Coast Guard. Fischer cruised with
the United States Coast Guard cutter Campbell in
the winter of 1943 and noted much material which
he incorporated into his paintings. These paintings
were exhibited at the Corcoran Gallery in Washington,
D.C., in November 1943.
Fischer continued to do magazine
illustrations through the fifties but began to prefer
commissions from private individuals for landscapes
and marine scenes. On March 26, 1962, he died just
before beginning work on a commissioned historical
battle painting.
Fischer was extremely prolific in
a variety of subjects but is remembered most for
his superb marine paintings. He was known for his
technical accuracy, strong, tight compositions, and
masterful portrayal of men's emotions. Like many
illustrators, Fischer used photographs to check positions,
lighting, and the way clothes creased, for his illustrations.

Title: A careless word... a needless sinking Artist:
Anton Otto Fischer Date: 1942 Size: 28.5"x37.5" Comments:
Very dramatic WWII poster by noted marine artist
Fischer, showing risk to Merchant vessels posed
by Loose Talk.

