Wednesday, May 25, 2016

Peter Arno's Hurried Note

As he [Peter Arno] told Joseph Mitchell:  "I don't think anything could be as much fun as to get a good hold on a pompous person and shake him or her until you can hear the false teeth rattling."
—Michael Maslin
Peter Arno: The Mad, Mad World of The New Yorker's Greatest Cartoonist

New York:  Regan Arts, 2016, p. 50

Who was Arno calling a pompous person? A woman languishing in her bath perhaps? Idly tasting bon-bons? Dangling a cigarette holder? Dictating a white lie to an amanuensis? What on earth could Arno be all fired up about?

"Er—'Dear Cousin Clara:  Just a hurried note before I catch my train'."
Peter Arno, Original art
The New Yorker, March 17, 1928, page 22

Swann Galleries, January 24, 2013, Sale 2300, Lot 100 with hammer price
With buyer's premium

"Er—'Dear Cousin Clara:  Just a hurried note before I catch my train'."
Peter Arno, The New Yorker, March 17, 1928, page 22

Note:  There are two things you can find a fair amount of around here:

Peter Arno

Original New Yorker cartoon art

Now would you please hand me the soap?

01866

No comments:

Post a Comment