Zoë Mozert (/ˈmoʊzərt/; April 27, 1907 – February 1, 1993), born Alice Adelaide Moser, was an American illustrator.
[1] In 1925 Mozert entered the Pennsylvania Museum School of Industrial Art where she studied under Thornton Oakley, a former student of Howard Pyle, and modeled to raise money for tuition.
[4] In 1941, publishers Brown & Bigelow bought Mozert's first nude and signed her to an exclusive calendar contract.
During World War II, her pin-up series for the company, called Victory Girls, was published both in calendar and mutoscope-card form.
By 1950, Mozert had become one of the "big four" illustrators nationally, along with Rolf Armstrong, Earl Moran and Gil Elvgren.