Showing posts with label SIMPLICISSIMUS. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SIMPLICISSIMUS. Show all posts

Sunday, December 4, 2011

World Encyclopedia of Cartoons T-Z

Here's the last of The World Encyclopedia of Cartoons, the 1980 book I got these from. I'm sure I missed some (that are scannable), so I'll probably go back to it at some later date.

Hilda Terry's feature Teena
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Arne Ungermann
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Still from Duṥan Vukotić's Concerto for Sub-Machine Gun
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Werner Wejp-Olsen (WOW)
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Gluyas Williams
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Adolphe Willette, 1903
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Artist unknown, it was between the W and Y sections. Is it supposed to represent the letter X or is it just a nice drawing?
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The Yarns of Captain Fibb, for Judge in 1909
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Bill Yates, for Saturday Evening Post
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There was a syndicated strip of Yogi Bear in the early '60s.
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Pino Zacarria (“Zac”)'s Kirie and Leison.
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Heinrich Zille for Simplicissimus
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Friday, October 14, 2011

World Encyclopedia of Cartoons III

A. B. Frost in 1883.

Peter Arno was one of the few people in the mainstream media to acknowledge non-marital sex, as seen in this cartoon for the New Yorker.


1922 cartoon by Karl Arnold for Simplicissimus,


Frank Beard for Judge . Year unknown.


Cyril Keith Bird a/k/a Fougasse.


Miguel Covarrubias, the Al Hirschfeld of Mexico, or maybe it was the other way around, in Life.


Gus Dirks in Judge


James Montgomery Flagg's caricature of Theodore Roosevelt from either Judge or Life.


A Dire Threat, 1904, by A. Z. Baker, who has no link anywhere, at least not one I feel like finding, so let's look at his entry in the encyclopedia I took these cartoons from.

ALFRED ZANTZIGER BAKER (1870-1933) American cartoonist born in Baltimore, Maryland. “Baker-Baker” (as he became known from his monogrammed signature of two Bs back to back) was co-educated in private schools and studied art at the Charcoal School in Baltimore the Académie Julian and the Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris.

“Baker pursued serious art and was exhibited at age 23 in the National Academy (later exhibitions were sponsored by the Société des Artistes Français and the Salon des Artistes Humoristes), but he joined the staff of Puck in 1898. As a cartoonist he did not confine his work to one outlet, and at the turn of the century he was appearing in Puck, Judge, Life, Scribner's, Harper's, Century, and St. Nicholas. His books include The Moving Picture Book (1911), (1912), and The Torn Book (1913). His innovations—such as die-cutting and 3-D drawings with glasses—are surpassed in the children's book genre only by those of the imaginative Peter Newell.

A.Z. Baker stated that he was influenced by French and Japanese cartoons (indeed, he often worked Japanese motifs into his drawings), but whatever the influences, it must be recorded that his work was among the freshest and cleverest of American cartooning at the turn of the century—and retains these characteristics even under modern scrutiny. He rejected the fine-line illustrator's then threating to stifle freedom of line and rendered his cartoons—which were almost exclusively animal gags—with a lush brush line, shaded with crayon on a coarse board. He had a delightful and visually agreeable sense of design and anatomy; his funny animals romped with animation among the solid society of drawings in the magazines. In this sense he helped forge a new spirit of amiable looseness in American magazine cartooning and was soon in the company of such men as Art Young, Leighton Budd, and Hy Mayer.”


Perry Barlow for The New Yorker, who also doesn't merit a link.

PERRY BARLOW (1892-1977). American cartoonist born in McKinney, Texas, near Dallas. Perry Barlow, who was famous for his many New Yorker cartoons and covers, was raised on his family's farm and spent his boyhood in Texas. He traveled to Illinois to attend the Art Institute of Chicago and there was part of a remarkable class that included Helen Hokinson andGarrett Price, also destined to be New Yorker greats. He met his wife, Dorothy Hope Smith, at the art school; she later became a famous portraitist of children best known for her drawing of the baby on the Gerber Trademark.

“Around 1920 the Barlows moved to New York, and he began a career of freelance cartooning and illustrating. At the Art Institute of Chicago he discovered that he was color blind, so his color work, featuring soft muted pastels, was done by his wife (and after her death by the watercolorist Catherine Barr). As success came the family joined the growing artists' community of Westport, Connecticut.

“James Geraghty, art editor of The New Yorker from 1939 to 1973, Has commented that Perry Barlow was “a shy, aloof man” but still a great artist with children.” The New Yorker's [then current] editor, William Shawn, regarded Perry Barlow as 'one of our three or four most prolific people.' Ironically, although he had an opportunity to publish an anthology of his cartoons, Barlow was always lukewarm on the project, and no anthology exists. From the 1920s until the early 1970s, however, his cartoons appeared in a variety of magazines, including Saturday Evening Post and Collier's. Fortunately the general anthologies of such magazines contain generous samplings of his works.

“Barlow's cartoons have a loose, sketchy style and soft, understated wash. Children were a favorite theme in his cartoons, which were usually geared more for a chuckle than a belly laugh and always displayed a refined, sophisticated sense of humor. His accomplishments as a New Yorker cover artist helped set the style for the magazine, along with covers by Peter Arno, Helen Hokinson and others. A Barlow cartoon was a humorous cartoon that needed no caption and captured some of the joy of living that appears to a cartoonist with an eye for it. Today, when the New Yorker's covers are often devoted to design sans humor, one can appreciate Perry Barlow's gentle cartoon covers all the more.”


Ralph Barton for Liberty.


C.D. Batchelor's 1937 Pulitzer Prize winner for Liberty.


Before Stan and Jan Berenstain did children's books, they did lots of gag cartoons for magazines like McCall's.


Roland Berthiaume, for La Patrie

Again, no information about him online, so...

ROLAND BERTHIAUME (1927-?) French-Canadian cartoonist born in Montreal, Quebec. Better known as “Berthio”, Roland Berthiaum attended Ste. Marie College (now known as the University of Quebec) in Montreal before embarking on a commercial art career. After attending night classes at Montreal School of Arts, Berthiaume spent a year in Paris (1951-52).

“In 1953 Berthiaume started his career with editorial cartoons in the weekly L'Autorité du Peuple, also contributing occasionally to such publications as La Semaine à Radio-Canada and Le Travail. He finally found his métier with the political cartoons he published in the political weekly Vrai. There Berthiaume was responsible for two pages of cartoons, usually four in number, dealing mainly with city problems. Berthiaume collaborated on Vrai from its inception in October 1954 to its demise in May 1959. He then went to the Montreal daily La Presse, where until 1967 he contributed Drôle de Journée(“Some Funny Day”), a column in the form of caricatural drawings and cartoons commenting on daily happenings.

“In 1967 Berthiaume returned to editorial cartooning, first for the daily Le Devoir, then for the pro-independence daily Le Jour (1974-76) and finally for Montréal-Matin. He has also worked for several magazines (Time,MacLean's). Two collections of his caricatures have been published: Un Monde Fou (“A Mad World”, 1961) and Les Cent Dessins du Centenaire (“The One Hundred Drawings of the Centennial”, 1967.

“Like Robert LaPalme, Berthiaume has always been concerned with form as well as with content. He was the first Canadian cartoonist to engage in character with a social thrust. Twice a winner at the International Salon of Caricature in Montreal (1964 and 1966), Berthiaume was the recipient of the Oliver Asselin Journalism Award in 1973.”


Franziska Bilek, Medusa at the Hairdressers, 1943, for Simplicissimus

Friday, October 7, 2011

World Encyclopedia of Cartoons II

More old-timey stuff from 1980's The World Encyclopedia of Cartoons

The Arkansas Trapper's Mistake by Caran D'Ache circa 1875, also featured in one of the early issues of Mad

Even back then they were doing shit jokes.





The Tail Maketh the Dog ca. 1880, by Frank “Chip” Bellew.


An Explosive Hug, also by Frank “Chip” Bellew.


by A. B. Frost , 1884. A collection of his stuff recently came out from Fantagraphics.





T. T. Heine for Simplicissimus in 1896.


Adolphe Willette, cover for L'Assiette au Beurre(A Plate of Butter)


From the Terrytoons series Aesop's Fables





from Ain't It a Grand and Glorious Feelin' by Clare Briggs for the New York Tribune

I couldn't find a link to the strip, but the encyclopedia had this to say about it:
AIN'T IT A GRAND AND GLORIOUS FEELIN' is among Clare Briggs's most fondly remembered slice-of-life newspaper panels. It appeared in sequential form (usually six panels o the page) on an irregular basis, alternating with other Briggs creations such as When a Feller Needs a Friend and The Days of Real Sport. There was no continuing cast of characters.

Ain't It a Grand and Glorious Feelin'? started appearing in the New York Tribune around 1917 (although the concept had undergone a dry run as early as 1912 under another title in the Chicago Tribune). The panel celebrated those small, everyday moments of serendipity that come as a sharp relief after a moment of fright, embarrassment, or frustration. Thus “ain't it a grand and glorious feelin'” when some housewife discovers that her lost wallet was found at the grocer's, or when some poor bookkeeper goes to bed with a clear mind after the errors in his books has been rectified? The feature addressed itself directly (“When you've been reading about a terrible kidnapping...”, Briggs would intone in the beginning, for instance) and always concluded on an upbeat note. Grand and Glorious Feelin' was tremendously popular during the 1920s, a decade it seemed whose mood it seemed to match perfectly, and the title became a popular catchphrase of the time.

“After Briggs died in 1930 the panel was discontinued, although some newspapers would reprint it occasionally. Long runs of the feature have been republished regularly over the years in cartoon anthologies, as well as in collections of Briggs's works.”

Sounds like “Ain't It a Grand and Glorious Feelin'?” was the “Yeah, baby!” of its time, which begs the question, what's the current “Yeah, baby!”?

Oskar Andersson a/k/a “O.A.”