Career
He was a commercial illustrator for over 40 years producing paintings for men’s adventure magazines, paperbacks, and storyboards. His most recent work included collages and paintings. As a child, Minney loved to draw and after graduating from Oakland High in 1946, he was accepted by the California School of Arts and Crafts.
Eventually, he hooked up with Eddie Balcourt, a well-known artist"s representative, and began his career as a professional illustrator.
Minney did many credited and uncredited illustrations for Stag, Foreign Men Only, Male, True Action, Manitoba’s World and many other publications of Magazine Management. He also did all the interior illustrations for the short-lived Space Science Fiction Magazine magazine.
As the 1960s wore on and United States. involvement in Vietnam increased and magazines like Penthouse became more explicit, the readership of the men’s adventure magazines dropped and jobs were harder to come by. One of the last men’s adventure magazine illustration Bruce did was for National Lampoon in November 1970.
This illustration is a brutal, acerbic parody in the men’s adventure style set in Vietnam.
Minney was the featured artist in Illustration magazine #40. His work was also featured in the Season 5 episode "Going Hollywood" of the History Channel series American Pickers, which aired on August 5, 2013. Paperbacks
From 1969 to 1986, Minney created over 400 paperback illustrations in oils and acrylic for Grosset & Dunlap, Avon, Fawcett, Harlequin, Ace, Pinnacle, Manor Books, and Pyramid.
Among the titles he illustrated were: the Lone Ranger series Horatio Hornblower series, and Windhaven series.