- THOMAS BLACKSHEAR II BIOGRAPHY

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THOMAS
BLACKSHEAR
II,
the son of
an Air Force
captain, was
born in
Waco, Texas,
and grew up
in Atlanta,
Georgia.
“Drawing was
all I ever
liked to
do,” he
says. “While
all the
other guys
were playing
baseball or
basketball,
I was in my
house,
drawing.” He
pursued an
interest in
art
throughout
high school,
securing a
scholarship
to the Art
Institute of
Chicago.
After a year
there, he
transferred
to the
nearby
Academy of
Art. While
finishing
his college
education,
he was
recruited by
Hallmark
Cards and
later became
the
apprentice
of
illustrator
Mark
English.
Blackshear
settled in
Kansas City,
where he
became head
illustrator
at the
prestigious
Godbold/Richter
Studio. A
year later,
he began a
prosperous
freelance
career,
illustrating
many
advertisements,
several U.S.
Postal
Service
stamp
collections—one
called
“Black
Heritage,”
another on
classic
movies, and
a third on
jazz
musicians—and
several
series of
Hamilton
Group
collector’s
plates
featuring
scenes from
Star Wars,
Star Trek,
and The
Wizard of
Oz. Although
he was
successful,
he was
dissatisfied
and decided
to pursue a
career in
fine art.
Blackshear
has received
many awards
for his
artwork,
including
the Society
of
Illustrators’
coveted Gold
Medal. He
was profiled
on The
Living
Canvas, an
art magazine
of the
airwaves
that was
shown on
public
television,
and he has
been
featured on
the
Ebony/Jet
Showcase and
The 700
Club, and in
The Saturday
Evening
Post. An
exhibit of
his original
works for
the Black
Heritage
stamp series
premiered in
1992 at the
Smithsonian’s
National
Museum of
American
History and
subsequently
toured the
United
States. |
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