Tuesday, May 21, 2024

Erik Drooker: The Signed Limited Edition of L

Eric Drooker's L (1990) was self-published in a limited edition of 1000. The title refers to the New York City's L train. Copy no. 14, signed and numbered, turned up last month on AbeBooks listed by Long Brothers Fine & Rare Books of Seattle. It's still available at the time of this posting.





Eric Drooker
AbeBooks listing accessed April 21, 2024


Eric Drooker
AbeBooks item description




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Monday, May 20, 2024

My Entry in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #897

A man takes his piggy bank for a walk in The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #897 from the issue of May 20, 2024. A neighbor comments. My caption is shown below. The drawing is by Kaamran Hafeez.

"So money does walk."



These captions couldn't keep up.
"I hear he no longer keeps it all in his mattress."
"He leaves his wallet at home."
"Every day he brings home the bacon."
"Let's see him try to do that with bitcoin."
"He's my landlord but I don't pay him directly."
"He's always out of step with the market."
"Don't be fooled into offering it a treat."
"They say he's well off, but he never spends anything."
"I see why he had to fire all the previous walkers."
"No wonder he ignores his family."
"He's not at all concerned about interest rates."





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Sunday, May 19, 2024

My Entries in the Moment Cartoon Caption Contest for Spring 2024

Moment magazine's Cartoon Caption Contest for the Spring 2024 issue depicts an obese pharaoh of ancient Egypt visiting the doctor's office. My four captions are shown below, the last being a rewrite of the first. I think the third is the best. The drawing is by Benjamin Schwartz.

“You’ll have to fix your food pyramid.”
"Spend more time walking like an Egyptian."
"I never thought YOU would overindulge in matzo."
"Rebuild that food pyramid."






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Saturday, May 18, 2024

Peter Arno: All Aboard the Elevator

A classic cartoon by The New Yorker's Peter Arno was sold on eBay this past Sunday:
"I told you we should have given them something for Christmas."
Peter Arno
Original art
The New Yorker,
 January 1, 1938, p. 16


True, we don't usually see manually-operated elevators these days, but they were once commonplace in New York apartment buildings. Arno extracts an awful lot of physical humor from the situation. Contrast the couple's awkwardness with the upright posture of the elevator operator.
"I told you we should have given them something for Christmas."
Peter Arno
Original art
The New Yorker,
 January 1, 1938, p. 16


Each of Arno's faces adds to the comedy.

The typed caption is affixed to the art, a no-no. The word told isn't even underlined.

Peter Arno's signature


Evidently the frame is not perfect.




Peter Arno
eBay listing ended May 12, 2024

Peter Arno
eBay item description





"I told you we should have given them something for Christmas."
Peter Arno
The New Yorker,
 January 1, 1938, p. 16


"I told you we should have given them something for Christmas."
Peter Arno
Original art
The New Yorker, January 1, 1938, p. 16


With a cartoon by Peter Arno and a spot drawing by Susanne Suba
A copy of this issue offered on Amazon clearly shows the cartoon to be on page 14, not 16. If the photograph looks familiar, it's because the seller used a lower-resolution version of this image as the final one in the listing. This magazine listed on Amazon is no doubt one of the regional variants lacking some of the pages in the New York metropolitan edition which the magazine kept as file copies.

In addition, the cartoon was collected in Peter Arno's Cartoon Revue (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1941), Cartoon Cavalcade (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1943), The Penguin Peter Arno (Penguin, 1949, 1957), and no doubt elsewhere.
Peter Arno's Cartoon Revue (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1941)

Craven, Thomas, ed. Cartoon Cavalcade (Chicago: Consolidated Book Publishers, 1945 edition)

The Penguin Peter Arno (Penguin, 1957)


* * *


Spot of a woman unbuttoning by a mirror
Susanne Suba
The New Yorker, January 1, 1938, p. 17



Note:  Original cartoon art by Peter Arno comes to eBay only when it is changing hands. We can enjoy even more Arno originals here when generous collectors choose to share their art virtually here. You may take that as a hint. Thank you, and don't forget to tip your blogger.



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Friday, May 17, 2024

Peter Arno: Duet at the Organ

A work of original New Yorker cartoon art from 1932 depicts a wealthy man and his servant seated at the organ. It recently surfaced on eBay, where it received seven bids and was sold. Peter Arno, the artist, created a trove of cartoons which, like this one, still maintain their impact today. If you were to go back just ten years earlier to, say, 1922, you would be hard-pressed to find a cartoon by anyone that holds up this well.

"Now Chopsticks!"
Peter Arno
Framed original art
The New Yorker,
 October 8, 1932, p. 14


Arno carried this drawing by sea to London where it was exhibited in December of that year at the Leicester Galleries, catalogue number 71. According to a notation on the label, it was purchased by one W. G. Eyre, Esq. Eventually it found its way to Carmel, California, according to the eBay seller.


"Now Chopsticks!"
Peter Arno
Original art
The New Yorker,
 October 8, 1932, p. 14

Large detail

Catalogue number 71 from the Leicester Galleries show






Peter Arno
eBay listing accessed April 22, 2024, six and a half days before the sale ended


Peter Arno
eBay item description.
 The date of the New Yorker issue is off by three weeks.

Peter Arno
More eBay item description business

Sold!




"Now Chopsticks!"
Peter Arno
The New Yorker, October 8, 1932, p. 14

"Now Chopsticks!"
Peter Arno
Original art
The New Yorker,
 October 8, 1932, p. 14



With a cartoon by Peter Arno and a spot drawing

How did the drawing end up stateside? A 1955 photograph from the Denver Post may hold a hint. It shows a Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Eyre and daughter Jane at a reception for the British Ambassador. Perhaps W. G. specialized in international trade and had legal work that brought him to Great Britain in 1932 where he bought the cartoon and later brought him to a cocktail party for the British Ambassador.
https://www.gettyimages.com/detail/news-photo/guests-at-cocktail-party-
the-thomas-tulls-gave-saturday-news-photo/162374602?adppopup=true



Note:  Here in the states, Time magazine covered Peter Arno's exhibition at the Leicester Galleries. It's here, in case you missed it in 1932.

In 2016, I covered the show in my own way, trying to identify ten of the exhibition's cartoons captured in a publicity photo of Arno. You can read that one here.

I'm still looking to find a catalogue from that Arno show. It's only been 91 years. What's taking so long?

In the meantime, I'd like to hear from collectors with other original Arnos still bearing labels from the Leicester Galleries show.

I can't quite make out the signature of the New Yorker's spot artist who drew the flamenco dancer. Is it Binder? Or does it start with an M? Drop me a line if you recognize the artist. Or can dance the flamenco.



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Thursday, May 16, 2024

Speaking of Pictures: Life Magazine on Peter Arno, 1941

In its October 13, 1941 issue, Life magazine gave its readers a generous sampling of ten Peter Arno cartoons from The New Yorker collected in his seventh book, Cartoon Revue. The looming wartime themes are evident, but there's also the 1939 World's Fair, a wedding night scenario, and a gag about aging—or is it about publicity?



Peter Arno
Life, October 13, 1941, pp. 8-9

I think Life made an obvious mistake here: placing the captions on the lower half of the page at the top of the cartoons could only have been dreamed up by an art director too concerned about "balance." The idea, I suppose, was to keep the captions from being trimmed off the lower edge of the page.

Peter Arno
eBay listing accessed April 27, 2024


Peter Arno
eBay item description
EBay paper sellers often don't disclose specific issue dates—I mean, why buy the two pages on offer when you could get a copy of the full magazine for probably not too much more?—but that withheld information is increasingly searchable. My own formidable Google skills gave me not only the issue date, but an additional page, numbered 11, with the final two Arno cartoons. Here, I'm pleased to report, both captions are placed underneath the drawing, where they belong.
Note:  I've been at this game long enough to have written a few comprehensive posts on some of these classic Peter Arno cartoons, including:




As for "Well, back to the old drawing board," Paul Karasik explains why this is his candidate for the perfect cartoon here.




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