Saturday, April 4, 2026

William Steig: Laughing at Losses

One has heard the expression laughing all the way to the bank. That is decidedly not what cartoonist William Steig depicted in his drawing of an executive laughing at a business chart showing a significant downturn. The original artwork was offered at auction on December 27. It may well date from the Great Depression. Carnegie's Auction Gallery of Los Angeles estimated its worth at $1,000 to $1,500 and opened the bidding at $700. It did not sell, perhaps owing to a present-day downturn.


The auction house suggested the tantalizing prospect that the illustration once had a caption which was erased. That's possible, but a caption seems a bit unnecessary here, no? The erasures could have been printer's instructions or possibly even a dedication to a giftee.

At any rate, it's hard to understand why there wasn't sufficient bidder interest. Economic downturns are always relevant somewhere, and they're funnier than upturns if one discounts the wide swath of people adversely affected by them. This well-fed fellow in the three-piece suit does not appear to be concerned:


Steig uses judicious highlighting to show the flow of the hair, including on the magnate's mustache.

Indecipherable printer's marks are visible along the top:

More markings are seen below Steig's signature, also unreadable. Signing in the shadow makes it harder for the printer to omit or move the signature.
William Steig's signature

Is prosperity just around the corner?

There is writing on the back along the bottom edge. Tell me something I don't know:
Verso

Verso

Verso

William Steig
Carnegie's Auction Gallery listing of December 27, 2025


William Steig
Carnegie's Auction Gallery item description



Note:
  I would like to hear from entrepreneurs and others who can identify where this William Steig drawing was published.



05238

Thursday, April 2, 2026

Michael's Copy of Maurice Sendak's Higglety Pigglety Pop! or There Must Be More to Life

Higglety Pigglety Pop! or There Must Be More to Life was published in 1967. A copy of the first edition was signed by Maurice Sendak to one Michael in July of 1979. The author included a sketch of a dog. Let's call her Jennie.





Maurice Sendak
AbeBooks listing accessed March 9, 2026


Maurice Sendak
AbeBooks item description





05237

Wednesday, April 1, 2026

R. Crumb: A Sketchbook Page from April 1, 1962

A sketchbook page of yellow lined paper was drawn upon by R. Crumb on April 1, 1962 and sold at Heritage Auctions on November 21, 2003. The unrelated sketches on the right side of the page, as it originally was bound, are undated.




The other side of the page bears the date and a self-portrait of Crumb drawing an interior on the sketchbook page we are looking at. Heritage gave it the title April Fool and called it an "infinity" piece, but I think that's a stretch on both counts. Or is the joke on me?


R. Crumb
Heritage Auctions listing of November 21, 2003

R. Crumb
Heritage Auctions item description





05236

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

The CartoonStock Cartoon Caption Contest No. 204

In the CartoonStock Caption Contest number 204, a cow is concerned about a human child who is refusing to eat hay with her calf. The cow, wearing her apron, is the speaker. The cartoonist, new to this blog, is Katherine Bettis.


The rules of the monthly cash prize contest have not changed: Five dollars buys up to three entries. Real cash prizes are $500 for first place and $100 for each of five runners up. As of this writing, I've put $245 into the first forty-nine pay-to-play contests and this fiftieth challenge brings my total cash outlay up to $250. Having achieved runner-up status with three previous entries, I've collected $300 from CartoonStock, so I'm still playing with the house's money, thank you very much. In fact, so few contestants enter that the odds may generally be considered favorable even for less-gifted caption writers. My three entries this round are shown below.

"I make it while the sun shines."
"I promise you the hay is grade A."
"Tell your friend not to have a cow."











05235

Monday, March 30, 2026

My Entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #984

In The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #984 from the issue of March 30, 2026, a rabbit artist is working on a large painting while another rabbit is, it seems, criticizing it. The critical bunny speaks. My submission is below. The drawing is by Mike Twohy.

"For this we stopped reproducing?"




These captions weren't masterpieces:
"It doesn't hop."
"You forgot to use a dropcloth."
"It needs a caption."
"Well, I think it sucks."
"Too many colors."
"I don't look like that."
"Eggs again?"
"Chocolate again?"
"Your struggles are boring."




05234

Sunday, March 29, 2026

National Doctors' Day 2026: Gahan Wilson 1969

Tomorrow is National Doctors' Day. Let's celebrate with a 1969 Playboy cartoon by Gahan Wilson set in a physician's office. The original art was sold by Heritage in the November 4 Illustration Art Signature Auction #8224.

"We may already be too late, Mr. Parker."
Gahan Wilson
Original art
Playboy, June 1969, p. 27


The doctor's eyes are squinting—never a good sign. The patient doesn't show any good signs either.
"We may already be too late, Mr. Parker."
Gahan Wilson
Original art
Playboy, June 1969, p. 27


Verso

Sixteen hours before the live auction, the bidding was already strong. But, unlike the patient, it would get stronger.

Gahan Wilson
Heritage Auctions Mainstream Illustration listing accessed sixteen hours before the sale of November 4, 2025

Gahan Wilson
Heritage Auctions Mainstream Illustration item description

Sold!


Finally, here's the prognosis as it appeared on the printed page:
"We may already be too late, Mr. Parker."
Gahan Wilson
Playboy, June 1969, p. 27



05233

Monday, March 23, 2026

My Entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #983

In The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #983 from the issue of March 23, 2026, a poppy seed bagel lies on a psychotherapist's couch and talks to his doctor, a bagel with caraway seeds. The patient speaks. My submission is below. The drawing is by Elisabeth McNair.

"I would thrive in the workplace but I can't pass a drug test."





April 2, 2026 Update:  The Finalists






05232

Thursday, March 19, 2026

Ronald Searle's Complete Published Works?

Somebody did a very thorough job collecting the published books of Ronald Searle. Forum Auctions, which offered the set yesterday, called the approximately two hundred volumes "The Complete Works of Ronald Searle" to which I might add only "or very nearly" out of an abundance of caution.


But rather than quibble, let's pause to admire the condition of all these books in their lovely dust jackets, the inclusion of some different editions—English, American, French—and the books by various authors whom Searle illustrated.


In addition, at least three of the books were personally inscribed by Searle. The most impressive of these, no doubt, is David Arkell's copy of Ronald Searle's Big Fat Cat Book (1982) inscribed in October of that year to his long-time journalist friend with a classic Searle cat.






The London auction house's presale estimate was 6,000-8,000 GBP, with bidding starting at 5,000 GBP.
Ronald Searle
Forum Auctions listing accessed March 13, 2026






Ronald Searle
Forum Auctions item description

Alas, no sale.





05231

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Bob Mankoff: Against Advice of Counsel

Last year an original drawing by Bob Mankoff, The New Yorker's cartoon editor from 1997 to 2017, was offered for sale on eBay. 

"Your Honor, against advice of council [sic] my client has decided to defend himself."
Bob Mankoff
Original cartoon art



The courtroom cartoon has heavy penciling under the crude ink drawing, suggesting that it's in its rough state. The caption has a misspelling—council instead of counsel—and the humor is a bit unsubtle.
"Your Honor, against advice of counsel my client has decided to defend himself."
Bob Mankoff
Original cartoon art

Bob Mankoff's signature


Bob Mankoff
eBay listing accessed October 20, 2025

Bob Mankoff
eBay item description



Note:  I don't believe this cartoon was ever published, but please let me know if I'm wrong.



05230