Friday, November 11, 2022

James Stevenson: Flush Royals

"It's good to be the king."
—Mel Brooks
History of the World, Part 1 (1981)


And queen, I might add. New Yorker cartoonist James Stevenson (1929-2017) demonstrates that there might be a better word to describe royals than flush:
"Don't you love being upscale?"
James Stevenson
Original art
The New Yorker, July 28, 1986, p. 35


Stevenson's caption, like Brooks's above quotation, relies on understatement for its comic effect. It looks to have been written with a felt tip pen. Unlike the rest of the cartoon, it is quite faded although still legible. The original art was sold at auction two weeks ago, in Norwalk. 

The faded caption



The king and queen stand out. The perspective of the composition makes them the two largest figures. The contrasting shading distinguishes them from all the others, and from each other. The perspective also creates a potential problem: we could be looking at the royals from behind. Stevenson solves this by having the king, who is speaking, turn toward the queen—and also toward our vantage point. Thus we get to see his face in three-quarter view.

Detail of the royal couple



The attendants are drawn loosely and indistinctly. There is even a sameness to their shading.
Detail of the attendants



Detail of the minstrels' gallery

Detail of the rafters

James Stevenson's signature



Copyright notice


Verso



James Stevenson
Westport Auction listing accessed October 26, 2022






Sold!







"Don't you love being upscale?"
James Stevenson
Original art
The New Yorker, July 28, 1986, p. 35



Cartoons by Bob Mankoff and James Stevenson

Note:  This blog thrives on original art. I'd like to receive images of original work by James Stevenson for future posts.

Dots all, folks!





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