Paul Edward Wenzel (February 14, 1935 – May 27, 2022) was an American artist, best known for his career with The Walt Disney Company, creating illustrations for movie posters and retail merchandise.[1]
Wenzel's most famous work is the Walt Disney portrait made, after Disney's passing in 1966, for a 6-cent commemorative stamp issued in the United States on September 11, 1968.[8] The stamp represents Walt Disney with a line of It's A Small World styled children coming out of a silhouette of Disneyland's Sleeping Beauty Castle on the edge of a sphere.[8] The portrait was illustrated by Wenzel while the children and the castle were made by Bob Moore.[8] During the first 10 days that the Disney stamp was on sale throughout the United States, more than 150 million copies were sold, making the Disney stamp one of the most popular and successful issues in United States history.[8][9]
Other work and retirement
Throughout the 1960s Wenzel was also an illustrator for science-fiction magazines creating covers and interior art for titles such as Space Travel; Galaxy Science Fiction; Worlds of Tomorrow; Fantastic Stories of Imagination; and if.[10]
In 2000, Wenzel retired from Disney to reside in Prescott, Arizona and pursue his fine art paintings of animals and American Indians. His work is exhibited by the Mountain Spirit Gallery.[2]
Wenzel died at his home in Prescott, Arizona, on May 27, 2022.[11]