In 1945, merely a couple of weeks after Victory in Europe Day, the
New Yorker published this cover art by the gifted Russian artist
Constantin Alajálov. The artwork was just sold on eBay for $5,000. The seller did a very good job describing the artwork and the specific moment in history it evokes. Let's first take a look at the sale and the seller's item description:
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Constantin Alajálov, Original cover artwork, The New Yorker, May 26, 1945 |
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Constantin Alajálov, Original cover artwork, The New Yorker, May 26, 1945 |
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Constantin Alajálov, Framed original cover artwork, The New Yorker, May 26, 1945 |
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Constantin Alajálov's signature |
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Constantin Alajálov, Detail of original cover artwork, The New Yorker, May 26, 1945 |
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Constantin Alajálov, Detail of original cover artwork, The New Yorker, May 26, 1945 |
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[End of eBay listing] |
One thing that can be said for Alajálov's
New Yorker covers is that they don't simply meet our expectations. The best ones possess an uncanny ability to surprise and delight. Imagine it was your assignment to design a magazine cover that would hit newsstands a couple of weeks after V-E Day. How would you illustrate the excitement and expectancy for a return to normal peacetime pleasures at a time when the nation was still technically mobilized for war? Would you set your cover at a military base? Somewhere in Europe? At sea? When you consider these possibilities, the simple idea of depicting numerous enlisted men and WAC's in uniform on shore leave enjoying the mundane delights of a day at the zoo is truly inspired.
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Constantin Alajálov, The New Yorker, May 26, 1945
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The composition could not have been an easy one to create. What could be more challenging than painting an aerial view of a crowd scene? The technical challenges have all been met splendidly, of course. Yet the image overwhelms the viewer not with its artistic bravura, but with its normalcy. This is a celebration of soldiers with nothing to do but await their return to civilian life while actually enjoying a spring day at the zoo. How sublime!
So the eBay seller is right, at least in part, in saying "The real subject is not the zoo." But the zoo is extremely important as the setting, and it is not just any zoo; it's the Central Park Zoo in New York City. The cover's view of the seal pool faces to the southwest giving the composition strong diagonals. A couple of vintage photos show the site as it was:
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The seal pool, Central Park Zoo, 1940's, facing west.
The umbrellas in the background can be seen on the upper right side of the Alajálov cover.
Photo from the City of New York's Parks and Recreation Department
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The seal pool in the Central Park Zoo, facing to the west, ground level.
The aviary on the left is a prominent feature of the New Yorker cover.
Photo from the Wurts Bros. Collection from The New York Public Library
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The approximate view of the Central Park Zoo as seen on Google Earth today |
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Constantin Alajálov, The New Yorker, May 26, 1945 |
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Constantin Alajálov, Original cover artwork, The New Yorker, May 26, 1945
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Note: Read more on
Constantin Alajálov here.
Additional examples of
original New Yorker cover art may be seen
here.
See older posts in celebration of on
National Library Week here.
Posts about
Passover may be found
here.
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