One day in 1974, Kinuko Yamabe Craft hand-delivered to Playboy’s Chicago office a set of paintings she’d been commissioned to create for the magazine. Designed to accompany a “ribald classic,” Craft’s elaborate wood-panel triptych and two additional works were so skillfully done, from the intricate medieval Russian iconography to the faux-distressed gold-leaf frames, that they looked as if they’d been lifted from the walls of a museum.
Craft was unfazed by Pope’s enthusiasm. Still a working artist today at the age of 79, she says that her many Playboy projects gave her the opportunity to learn about other artists and their techniques. “Playboy worked like a school for me,” she says. “It was the most effective training I ever got.”
Having begun in 1967 with an assignment from founding art director Arthur Paul, Craft continued to work for Playboy through 2000. Across those five decades, her phenomenal gift for working in whatever medium and style the task at hand required—including art deco, biblical, trompe l’oeil, even nursery-rhyme illustration—is on display in more than 100 magazine pieces.
Another early moment had an indelible effect on the nascent artist. “My grandmother was carrying me on her back. Outside was the forest, in beautiful sunlight. A stray bamboo leaf, stuck to the end of a cobweb, twirling with the breeze. The sunlight hit the wooden sash, and I thought it was the most beautiful thing,” she says. “It is etched in my mind. That was the first full awareness of being surrounded by beauty.”
Ever since, Craft has gravitated toward beauty and endeavored to capture it in her work. “Unfortunately, I’m a mere mortal,” she says, “and so I can’t grab it.”
After obtaining a fine art degree in Japan, Craft moved to the States in late 1964 for graduate study at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Arriving in the thick of a miserable winter, she almost turned on her heel and fled. “No leaves on the trees, and it was desolate, so lonely looking,” she recalls. “And the cold! It was colder than any cold I knew.”
But she stuck it out and began her studies in 1965, frequently visiting the eponymous museum next door to wonder at the master-works within. After a year and a half, Craft left school and started working within Chicago’s studio system, which she describes as “a bunch of illustrators sitting and waiting for salesmen to bring jobs.” It wasn’t long before her portfolio found its way to Art Paul and she accepted her first Playboy assignment: an illustration for a wry short story about urban bohemians. From there the Playboy commissions kept coming in, engaging her virtuoso artistry for everything from fiction, humor, essays and tech stories to a sex survey.
“With her sophisticated citation of many strands from Western art’s tradition of visual fantasy, Craft clearly has high expectations for her audience’s wider cultural knowledge,” writes professor Lorraine Janzen Kooistra about Craft’s Playboy paintings for another ribald classic: Christina Rossetti’s Goblin Market. Hieronymus Bosch, Botticelli and Arthur Rackham are among the visual references Kooistra notes in the playfully wicked paintings.
You can feel the painter's passion imprisoned in the canvas.
Bradbury goes on: “One cannot help but think how delightful it would be to walk into a gallery full of the fruits of her kaleidoscopic talents.” (We’re happy to report that one can, simply by flipping through the Playboy archive.) Years later, Craft would illustrate The Witch Door, one of Bradbury’s original Playboy short stories.
Other notable authors whose stories were paired with Craft’s creations include Paul Theroux, John Collier and T.C. Boyle. Alice K. Turner, Playboy’s fiction editor from 1980 to 2001, described her as “one of our very best artists.”
Writer Gore Vidal was so taken with one of Craft’s paintings for his 1978 story Kalki that she and the magazine decided to give it to him. But in trying to compliment her work, Vidal unintentionally slighted her. “When he received it, he said, ‘I usually don’t like illustration, but I like this one.’ It’s offensive,” Craft says, laughing. “I wanted to say, ‘What’s wrong with illustration?’ ”
“Everything that was flying my way, I caught it. It was one of those aggressive periods. I have to do it, I want to do it,” she says. “That was the passion I had—even for math-book illustrations.”
In the first decades of her career, illustration was a male-dominated field, as Pope recalls. Craft faced additional barriers, especially at smaller agencies and publications. “When they looked at me, all they saw was Asian. ‘Bring me the Asian samples from your portfolio next time,’ ” Craft says potential clients would tell her. “Not being born in this country, and speaking with an accent, was not advantageous.”
But Craft recalls Playboy as being fair and welcoming. “They looked at me as a painter, just a painter,” she says. “Playboy was gender blind, color blind.”
Craft’s work has been shown in galleries across the country, and she was inducted into the Society of Illustrators hall of fame in 2008. Her paintings have graced the covers and pages of dozens of books, and her work is in the permanent collection of the Smithsonian.
Though the advent of faxing and later FedEx made it much easier to deliver sketches and final art to clients, not all technological advances have resonated with Craft. Digital art in particular holds no allure. “At a museum, you can feel the painter’s passion imprisoned in the canvas,” she says. “When it’s printed, everything—structure, composition, idea—is there, but not the passion. Digital gives me the same feeling. It’s beautiful, but somehow not enough.”
The artwork Craft produced for Playboy spanned multiple genres, but today she paints mostly in a style of fantastical realism. Her newer work frequently features strong women characters such as Eleanor of Aquitaine, the 12th century queen.
“I’m becoming a militant for women’s rights,” Craft says. “Y chromosome is not that great!”
These days she sells her original canvases through the Borsini-Burr Gallery in California. She’s hard at work on an oil painting of a “winter general” who marched from the depths of her imagination—a powerful white-haired woman wearing armor and wielding a sword. For such works the initial drawing can take up to a week, followed by session after session of painting with her brushes, which she likens to feeding: “If the painting takes longer, I have to feed her again. It’s very hard. I’m 79 years old and work like I’m 49!”
Taxing though it may be, Craft has no plans to stop painting, finding purpose in endlessly chasing a connection to beauty and to nature. “There’s something I want to grasp, which always eludes me. I think I’m going to feel that till the end of my life,” Craft says. “My poor bones can’t rest. I have to do what I’m wired to do.”