Thursday, December 14, 2023

Peter Arno: Cyrano de Bergerac

In the midst of New Yorker cartoonist Peter Arno's classic collection Man in the Shower (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1944), he provides an interlude with four full page illustrations of literary Classics: The Three Musketeers, Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, and Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. They are by no means typical of Arno's best work and they appeared in The American Magazine, not in The New Yorker, prior to their appearance in the book. Arno must have felt a fondness for them, but they are far from his most memorable drawings in the volume.


The illustration entitled Cyrano de Bergerac, depicting an important scene from the 1897 play by Edmund Rostand has to belong to the same series. The piece didn't make the cut for Man in the Shower and probably wasn't reprinted elsewhere.

Cyrano de Bergerac
Peter Arno
Original art
The American Magazine, July 1941, p. 52


Cyrano de Bergerac
Peter Arno
Original art
The American Magazine, July 1941, p. 52


Peter Arno's signature

Handwritten title




On December 10, the Arno drawing was offered for sale by Clarke Auction Gallery of Larchmont in the lot immediately after his composition Mother's Little Helper. They came to the market together out of an estate in Rye. The presale estimate for each was $1,000 to $1,500.
Peter Arno
Clarke Auction Gallery listing accessed December 5, 2023




The artwork was sold with a hammer price of $700.

May 7, 2024 Update:  I have updated this post to reflect my current belief that this series of literary illustrations were first published in The American Magazine. I base this on a label found on the verso of Arno's illustration of Ivanhoe currently listed on eBay.

Label on the verso of Ivanhoe by Peter Arno




August 5, 2024 Update:  I have added the publication history to the captions on the original art.


Note:  This drawing by Peter Arno was probably published in The American Magazine, but when? Anyone who can provide a good citation should get in touch. Collectors take note: both published and unpublished Arno are always worth a post or two around here.





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1 comment:

  1. I believe that Peter Arno lived near Rye NY during the last years of his life. I'm guessing there might be more estates there housing his artwork. Where did all his drawings go?

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