Friday, January 12, 2024

The Art of the Redraw: The Addams Family Children Back From Camp

We now come to the third and final redrawn New Yorker cartoon by Charles Addams that came to light three years ago when offered for sale at an auction house in Penzance. Like the two we have already seen, this one features characters we today recognize as the Addams Family. The original drawing was published in The New Yorker of August 30, 1947.

"It's the children, darling—back from camp."
Charles Addams
The New Yorker,
 August 30, 1947, page 20


A cartoon by Charles Addams and a spot drawing of a street corner by "h"


As luck would have it, I have already posted the original published art here:

"It's the children, darling, back from camp."
Charles Addams
Original art
Published as "It's the children, darling—back from camp."
The New Yorker, August 30, 1947, page 20

And now let's have a look at that redraw:
"It's the children, darling, back from camp."
Charles Addams
Redraw after
The New Yorker, August 30, 1947, page 20


The redraw suffers a bit from foxing outside the image. The board is 76 x 56 cm with a lot of white area around the drawing, whereas the New Yorker original from Christie's is only 40.6 x 30.5 cm. The redrawn caption is in capital letters while the original is in cursive. Could these differences be because the original is intended solely for reproduction while the redraw is intended for display? Interestingly, both captions are written with two commas, but The New Yorker substitutes a dash for the second comma, giving the punchline more punch.

Here is Gomez in the original and then in the redraw:
Original



Redraw

Addams has moved the torn curtain to the left to better frame Gomez against a dark backdrop. His nose is drawn differently. The banisters are less tapered in the redraw. In fact, many of the details seem less carefully rendered and shaded.

Thing lurks above:
Original

Redraw

Again, some of the exquisite subtleties seem lost in the redraw.

Lurch stands at the ready:
Original

Redraw

The redraw doesn't have the same attention to detail. Compare the feather duster, the steps, the floorboards, Lurch.

Finally, there is the quadrant with Morticia, the driver, Wednesday, and Pugsley, the visual payoff for the cartoon:
Original

Redraw


Once again, the redraw is splendid, but there is more care given to the original.

The David Lay auction continues:
"It's the children, darling, back from camp."
Charles Addams
Redraw after
The New Yorker, August 30, 1947, page 20

Verso of Whatman drawing board

Signature of Chas Addams

"It's the children, darling, back from camp."
Charles Addams
Redraw after
The New Yorker, August 30, 1947, page 20

Handwritten caption  in capital letters

"It's the children, darling, back from camp."
Charles Addams
Redraw after
The New Yorker, August 30, 1947, page 20

Verso label

Verso

Detail of Lurch, Morticia, driver, Wednesday, and Pugsley

Detail of Gomez

Charles Addams
Lay's Auctioneers Fine Art Sale of January 29, 2021

The three Addams redraws in the virtual Fine Art Sale
Lot 583:  Redraw of January 24, 1948                     Lot 582:  Redraw of August 30, 1947                    Lot 581:  Redraw of November 25, 1939


And there you have it. If the three redraws were commissioned together, as seems probable, their dates would have to be after January 24, 1948. We are told they were obtained in London the late 1940s.



Note:  I wish once again to thank the reader who informed me of this sale. I apologize for taking three years to report on it.

Are there any more Charles Addams redraws out there? Your blogger wants to know.

These newsworthy Addams finds were covered in the Daily Mail here.

* * *

The artist who signed the New Yorker spot drawing opposite the Addams cartoon with an "h" is unknown to me. Can anyone help me out?
"h"
Spot drawing of a street corner

The New Yorker, August 30, 1947, page 21




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