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Remembering James Thurber

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American humorist James Thurber was born on December 8, 1894 and died on this date in 1961. Here are three obituaries dating from the days after his passing. The authors are writer Lewis Gannett, sportswriter Red Smith, and New Yorker editor William Shawn who turns over more than half the printed page to the reminiscences of Thurber's friend E. B. White.

"A case could be made for the statement that Thurber is the most widely known American artist in the world today."
Lewis Gannett,
  "James Thurber:  'Pre-Intentionalist'"
Herald Tribune Books, November 12, 1962, page 5

"Jim Thurber was the greatest humorist of his time and probably, as the obituary suggested, America's greatest since Mark Twain."
Red Smith, "Jim Thurber"
The New York Herald Tribune, [November] 1961

"Certainly there will never be an issue of The New Yorker of which Thurber is not a part."
William Shawn
and E. B. White, "James Thurber"
The New Yorker, November 11, 1961, page 247


Note:  If you've got original art by the great James Thurber, I'd love to see it.


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02354

Dreamcatcher: Otto Soglow in College Humor, August 1937

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Otto Soglow's cartoon for College Humor's issue of August 1937 depicts the sort of dream which must have been familiar to many of the magazine's youthful male readers. It also features a novel sort of dreamcatcher...

Otto Soglow
College Humor, Vol. 5, No. 4, August 1937, page 21
Scanned by Dick Buchanan


Note:  Once again my thanks go to Dick Buchanan for using his superb scanning skills for the betterment of mankind. He contributes regularly to Mike Lynch Cartoons, most recently a post called, "From the Dick Buchanan Files: Virgil Partch Part Two; VIP in the 1950s."

Readers with access to original art or published rarities by Otto Soglow are encouraged to contribute scans or photos to the blog.


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Otto Soglow

College Humor

Dick Buchanan

02355

Tilting at Windmills: George Booth Proposed New Yorker Cover Art

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Four New Yorker magazine cover pitches by George Booth are under glass together at the Society of Illustrators, part of the current exhibition "George Booth—A Cartoonist's Life" curated by J. J. Sedelmaier. The first, sketched on a paper dinner napkin, depicts an extreme sporting event. The next shows a friendly, undersea encounter between a dolphin and a scuba diver. It is a simple composition with elegant, flowing lines. A collaged cover proposal goes after an enormous problem in insect control. Finally there is a reworked image of Don Quixote from June of 2004, here redrawn, we are told, with a more dramatic sun and with the suggestion to the art editor that additional windmills could be added to represent the trouble spots of Afghanistan, Iran, and North Korea. Yes, George Booth doesn't fear the political scene.





Note:  "George Booth—A Cartoonist's Life" remains on view at the Society of Illustrators in New York through December 30, 2017. On Wednesday evening November 8th the Society will host "An Evening with George Booth." Admission is by ticket. Come by and say hi to Mr. Booth. Say hi to me too. I'll likely be wearing a suit and pestering the cartoonists.

The artwork shown here is from the George Booth Collection. This blog could always use a few more scans or photos of original art by the cartoonist. Published obscurities are welcome too.


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George Booth

Proposed New Yorker Cover Art

The Society of Illustrators


02356

Cat Got Your Tail?—George Booth Proposed New Yorker Cover Art

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One of the joys of the current exhibition "George Booth—A Cartoonist's Life" at the Society of Illustrators is being able to see a handful of George Booth's magazine cover proposals for The New Yorker. It is of course distinctly unusual for a national weekly newsmagazine to feature artistic cover illustrations without the distraction of blurbs or titles, and Mr. Booth himself brings a distinctly unusual sensibility to the art form. To wit: in a clean, comfortable home featuring throw rugs, a floral arrangement, and patterned wallpaper, the one thing that has captured the cat's attention is the terrier's wagging tail. A hitherto unknown magazine cover proposal, this image is nothing short of delightful. The exhibition is curated by J. J. Sedelmaier.



Note:  "George Booth—A Cartoonist's Life" remains on view at the Society of Illustrators in New York through December 30, 2017. On Wednesday evening November 8th the Society will host "An Evening with George Booth." Tickets are available online. Come see the art and see Mr. Booth. Hey, see me too.

The original art shown here is from the George Booth Collection via the Society of Illustrators. This blog could always use a few more scans or photos of original art by this world-class cartoonist. Published rarities are welcome too.


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George Booth

Proposed New Yorker Cover Art

The Society of Illustrators


02357

My Entry in the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #591—Almost

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I didn't get to make my usual last-minute submission to the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #591 for November 6, 2017 because the contest ended an hour early. Someone at the New Yorker forgot to turn the Caption Contest clock back an hour for the end of daylight saving time. Let's discuss how I feel about that. The drawing is by P. C. Vey.

"Now, now, don't you think you've outgrown
a rubber ducky?"

I don't think this caption would have won, but I certainly have no chance now. These captions wouldn't have done the trick either:
"When is the last time you got to relax and have some good, clean fun?"
"I'm only going to ask once that you don't splash."



Note:  Last week, cartoonist Tom Cheney went all primitive about cave art. See Contest #590.

Then immerse yourself in my blog posts about P. C. Vey.

Psychiatrist jokes? Can do.

02358

The Art of the Polling Place: Garrett Price Proposed New Yorker Cover Art

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Garrett Price's proposed New Yorker covers demonstrate his facility for incorporating widely-differing artistic styles, and that extends to the art of schoolchildren. On Election Day, voting booths are commonly set up in school gymnasiums and student art is often hanging in the vicinity. The American space capsule shown in one of the children's pictures is of the Mercury or Gemini vintage and probably dates this drawing to the early 1960s.

Garrett Price
Proposed 
New Yorker cover art

Detail

Detail

Detail

Detail

Detail

Garrett Price's signature

Verso

The Art of the Polling Place: Garrett Price Proposed New Yorker Cover Art
eBay Listing Ended March 26, 2017



The Art of the Polling Place: Garrett Price Proposed New Yorker Cover Art
eBay Item Description

The Art of the Polling Place: Garrett Price Proposed New Yorker Cover Art
eBay Bid History
Last-Second Winning Bid!


Garrett Price
Proposed New Yorker cover art


Note:  I love to display original art by Garrett Price, published or unpublished, here on Attempted Bloggery. Please send your scans or photographs this way.


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Garrett Price

Proposed New Yorker Cover Art

Election Day


02359

Bork! The Onomatopoetic George Booth

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Two sequential gags—one in five panels and another in six—share a frame in the show "George Booth—A Cartoonist's Life" now on view at the Society of Illustrators. The exhibition is curated by animator J. J. Sedelmaier who knows a thing or two about how images work in sequence. On the right, one of George Booth's signature English Bull Terriers lets us know what it thinks of the cat's bowl in six panels. On the left, a caveman grabs a quick bite in five panels, including one gurgly sound effect and one very short punch line. That sound effect—BORK!—is fairly unusual in the cartoon repertory. Bork seems like a newly-coined example of onomatopoeia, one of those words, like beep or boom, whose sound imitates the thing it describes.

George Booth
"Fast Food!" and Dog Eating Cat's Bowl


But, not so fast. What if Bork isn't merely a random sound effect? What if it's also... a name? Could the caveman's satisfied eructation be something more insidious, a politically-charged hand grenade masquerading as a silly cartoon sound effect? What if Mr. Booth had submitted this cartoon to The New Yorker back in 1987 when President Reagan made Robert Bork his very controversial Supreme Court nominee? What then?

No way, you say. We're talking about The New Yorker, the apogee of urbane wit and sophistication. That magazine would never permit a Supreme Court nominee's name to appear in a cartoon as a base sound effect.

Ah, innocent reader! If only that were so...

Robert Weber
The New Yorker, October 5, 1987, page 33

http://archives.newyorker.com/?i=1987-10-05#folio=032


Note:  After the United States Senate rejected conservative Robert Bork's nomination to the Supreme Court, liberal Justice Lewis Powell's seat went to Judge Anthony Kennedy. Robert Bork died in 2012.

Tonight the Society of Illustrators in New York will host "An Evening with George Booth." Tickets are available online. Come see the exhibition and hear what Mr. Booth has to say. Maybe he'll discourse on Constitutional originalism and caveman cartoons, but I doubt it. "George Booth—A Cartoonist's Life" will remain on view at the Society of Illustrators through December 30, 2017.

The original art shown in this post is part of the George Booth Collection via the Society of Illustrators. I'm always looking for scans or photos of original art by this one-of-a-kind cartoonist. Rare published cartoons are welcome too. Bork!


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George Booth

Robert Weber

The Society of Illustrators


02360

Pop Art: Garrett Price Proposed New Yorker Cover Art

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A New Yorker magazine cover proposal by Garrett Price follows a contemporary art movement downstream into art school. The widespread appropriation of comic book and comic strip characters onto the canvasses and smocks of art students shows the massive influence of the Pop Art movement. As a practical matter, Price probably couldn't have expected to get an image of Dagwood Bumstead or Mickey Mouse onto the cover of The New Yorker in the 1960s. Even if he did, the idea of getting the name Phlembrant past the editorial eye of William Shawn was simply preposterous.







Garrett Price's signature

Verso

Pop Art:  Garrett Price Proposed New Yorker Cover Art
eBay Listing Ended March 26, 2017

Pop Art:  Garrett Price Proposed New Yorker Cover Art
eBay Item Description

eBay Bid History
Three bids in the final hour fail to wrest it from the winner.






Note:  Who is that comic book character hanging on the wall?

Original art by Garrett Price, published or unpublished, is welcome here on Attempted Bloggery. Please send your scans or photographs this way.


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Garrett Price

Proposed New Yorker Cover Art

Pop Art

02361

John Held, Jr.: The Yale-Princeton Football Game

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Tomorrow the Princeton-Yale football rivalry begun in 1873 continues at Princeton. For me, the graphic high point of this rivalry came in 1927 when John Held, Jr. illustrated the cover for the program. The 1927 game was played in New Haven; Held was a Connecticut resident who created other illustrations for Yale. The program cover is illustrated with one of Held's woodcut-style prints evocative not of the Jazz Age, but of the 1890s. The look was deliberately old-fashioned, even back then.

John Held, Jr.
Yale-Princeton program cover
November 12, 1927

A copy of the program in less-than-ideal condition was sold in the spring on eBay:


John Held, Jr.
eBay Listing Ended April 3, 2017

John Held, Jr.
eBay Item Description

eBay Bid History
Eight bids, with the winning bid placed in the final ten minutes




Note:  This just in:  On November 12, 1927 the Yale Bulldogs defeated the Princeton Tigers, 14-6. Over the years Yale has won 73 games to Princeton's 56, with 10 ties dating to the earlier years.

Original art by John Held, Jr., published or unpublished; whether drawn, printed, or painted; is sought-after stuff here on Attempted Bloggery. Please send your scans or photographs this way. I'd also love to post a few published Held images that are new to the internet.

Am I the only one who feels the last 90 years have been disappointing? I thought not.


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John Held, Jr.

Football

Princeton
02362

You Can't Spell America Without ME, Signed

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Obtained at a book signing on Friday, here's a brand spanking new copy of You Can't Spell America Without ME:  The Really Tremendous Inside Story of My Fantastic First Year as President Donald J. Trump. It bills itself as "A So-Called Parody by Alec Baldwin and Kurt Anderson," both of whom signed the book. Mr. Trump was preoccupied in Asia and could not himself be present at the signing.

You Can't Spell America Without ME:
The Really Tremendous Inside Story of
My Fantastic First Year as President
Donald J. Trump
A So-Called Parody
 by
Alec Baldwin & Kurt Andersen

New York:  Penguin Press, 2017

Signed by Alec Baldwin and Kurt Andersen


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Donald J. Trump
02363

A First Edition of P. G. Wodehouse's Eggs, Beans and Crumpets

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Eggs, Beans and Crumpets—which of these might you be? A 1940 first edition of Wodehouse's humorous short story collection is not in the best condition, but it still sells for a song.




P. G. Wodehouse
eBay Listing Ended June 16, 2017

P. G. Wodehouse
eBay Item Description

P. G. Wodehouse
eBay Bid History
Only four bids, but the one placed in the last six seconds is the one that counts




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P. G. Wodehouse
02364

My Entry in the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #592

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Here is my entry in the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #592 for November 13, 2017. The drawing is by Mick Stevens.

"There's not a Shakespeare in the flock."



Or maybe I should have gone with one of these...
"This time we have all our ducks in a row."
"I thought we agreed on penguins."


Note:  Last week cartoonist P. C. Vey gave us a Freudian bath. Take a deep dive into Contest #591.

See whether Mick Stevens has all his ducks in a row in the blog archives.

And, the question on everyone's mind, why a duck?

02365

Otto Soglow: It's the Law! by Dick Hyman

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It's the Law! was a regular feature that ran in The American Magazine from 1934 to 1956. The series recounted some of the riduculous laws that remained on the books around the country. Written by Dick Hyman, it was illustrated with an appropriate blend of humor and absurdity by the matchless Otto Soglow.

Otto Soglow
It's the Law! by Dick Hyman
The American Magazine, February 1942, page 56

Scan by Dick Buchanan
Otto Soglow
It's the Law! by Dick Hyman
The American Magazine, October 1942, page 134

Scan by Dick Buchanan
Otto Soglow
It's the Law! by Dick Hyman
The American Magazine, Vacation Issue 1947, page 68

Scan by Dick Buchanan
Otto Soglow
It's the Law! by Dick Hyman
The American Magazine, February 1948, page 64

Scan by Dick Buchanan


Otto Soglow
It's the Law! by Dick Hyman
The American Magazine, June 1951, page 68

Scan by Dick Buchanan

Note:  Once again my thanks go to Dick Buchanan for providing Attempted Bloggery with superb scans from the legendary Dick Buchanan Cartoon Clip Files. Dick contributes regularly to Mike Lynch Cartoons, most recently a post entitled, "From the Dick Buchanan Files: More 1960s Cartoons from PUNCH."

Readers interested in further examples of It's the Law! by Dick Hyman with illustrations by Otto Soglow collected for Reader's Digest can look again to Mike Lynch Cartoons. The 2013 post is called IT'S AGAINST THE LAW by Dick Hyman and Otto Soglow.

Ambitious readers with access to original art, correspondence, or published rarities by Otto Soglow are encouraged to contribute scans or photos of said material to this blog.


Quick Links to the Attempted Bloggery Archives:

Otto Soglow

Dick Buchanan

02366

The Punning Otto Soglow

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For the May 1948 issue of The American Magazine, cartoonist Otto Soglow ventured into the fraught world of animal puns. In point of fact, the cartoon gives us not one  pun, but two. We don't get to see a lot of punning cartoons on this blog. Maybe this will explain why...


Otto Soglow
"How do you expect to get any attention, deer? You haven't got the gnu look."
The American Magazine,
May 1948, page 107

Scan by Dick Buchanan


Note: A tip of the hat goes to Dick Buchanan for providing Attempted Bloggery with a superb scan from the legendary Dick Buchanan Cartoon Clip Files. Truth is, I never heard of The American Magazine until Dick mentioned it to me and sent a few scans. Dick contributes regularly to Mike Lynch Cartoons, most recently a post entitled, "From the Dick Buchanan Files: More 1960s Cartoons from PUNCH."


Ambitious readers with access to original art or other published rarities by Otto Soglow are encouraged to contribute scans or photos to this blog. Let's keep this unique cartoonist in the public eye.


Not counting my Caption Contest submissions, today's cartoons contains probably the most outrageous pun ever to appear on Attempted Bloggery. Readers are invited to dig into their own archives and submit other examples of punning cartoons with an equal or if possible greater groan quotient.



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Otto Soglow


Dick Buchanan

Puns

Attempted Bloggery's Gnu Age Index



02367

James Thurber: Marriages Are Made in Heaven

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James Thurber, noting that "Marriages Are Made in Heaven," makes an appropriately celestial drawing on stationery of the École des Beaux-Arts. The composition and the figures are delightful, but note how oddly Thurber has linked the arms of the couple as if they are ribbons. There's no point where one person's arm ends and the other's begins. While this could be mere shoddy draughtsmanship, the looping arms might instead be meant to represent lines of orbit, something that would be in keeping with the heavenly theme of the drawing.


James Thurber
Marriages Are Made in Heaven

James Thurber
Marriages Are Made in Heaven




James Thurber
eBay Listing as  of November 13, 2017

James Thurber
eBay Item Description

James Thurber
Marriages Are Made in Heaven


Note:  I would love to see any other example of a drawing by James Thurber in which arms are linked in this strange manner, if such a thing exists anywhere else. Of course, any Thurber drawing is always welcome here, even an anatomically correct one, again if such a thing exists.

Happy 26th anniversary to my wife!


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02368

Otto Soglow: Staying Dry

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It's January 1931, but you can be forgiven if you don't recognize that the Great Depression is upon us from this Judge cartoon by Otto Soglow. At least we know the importance during Prohibition of keeping dry. 

Otto Soglow
Judge, January 1931, page 11
Scan by Dick Buchanan


Note:  My thanks to Dick Buchanan for providing Attempted Bloggery with access to this scan from the world-renowned Dick Buchanan Cartoon Clip Files. Dick contributes regularly to Mike Lynch Cartoons, most recently a post entitled, "Dick Buchanan's Favorite Gag Cartoons 1946 - 1964." Find out what people were laughing at during the years of the baby boom.

Otto Soglow was a prolific cartoonist with a special flair for the wordless gag. Readers are encouraged to contribute scans or photos of original art, rare published cartoons, and other Sogloviana to this blog. Did I just make up a word?


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A Chicken in Almost Every Pot: Otto Soglow's New Deal

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A series of magazine covers done by cartoonist Otto Soglow for Judge in 1938 offers some insights on how Franklin D. Roosevelt's New Deal was embraced by the press. The covers are all intensely colorful economic parables of the Depression executed against a plain white background. The four recurring characters are second-term Democratic President FDR, a farmer, a worker, and a capitalist, each trying to cope with the dire economic situation. Many an American president might be depicted as the advocate of agriculture, of labor, or of business, but it's unusual even during hard times for a President of either party to be depicted as the champion of all three.

On the April 1938 Judge cover, FDR is drawn as an acrobat on the flying trapeze executing a breathtaking midair catch of the farmer while immobile business and labor look on aghast. The May cover shows the three branches of the economy tangled around the maypole, with the capable President clearly taking charge of the awkward situation. The June cover alludes to the famous promise of a chicken in every pot, one often incorrectly attributed to Herbert Hoover and embraced by the Republican party back in 1928 during more prosperous times. Note also that each cover depicts the President as physically vigorous and healthy, with no reference to the braces he required to stand or the wheelchair he required for mobility.

Otto Soglow
Judge, April 1938
Otto Soglow
Judge, May 1938
Scan by Dick Buchanan
Otto Soglow
Judge, June 1938
Scan by Dick Buchanan

Note:  Once again I offer my thanks to Dick Buchanan for providing Attempted Bloggery with two Judge cover scans from the legendary Dick Buchanan Cartoon Clip Files. The April cover comes from Mike Lynch Cartoons to which Dick regularly contributes, most recently a post entitled, "Dick Buchanan's Favorite Gag Cartoons 1946 - 1964." See what magazine readers were laughing at during the postwar years with the Depression long behind them.

Otto Soglow was a prolific cartoonist especially at home with the wordless gag. Readers are encouraged to contribute scans or photos of original art or of rare published cartoons. I am especially eager to know whether there are any more Judge covers in this FDR series.


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Follow the Fold: Otto Soglow in College Humor, July 1937

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Cartoonist Otto Soglow's bank teller gets religion in four panels as seen in the July 1937 issue of College Humor. We know quite a lot about this teller: his name is Mr. MacIntosh, he works for the Bean Exchange(!), and he grooms a mustache that is about to go out of style forever.

Otto Soglow
College Humor, Vol 5, No. 3, July 1937, page 13


Note:  This cartoon was photographed in the July 1937 issue of College Humor, just one page out of some 5,600 publications in the Steven Boss humor magazine collection. You can find it in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library at Columbia University. A blogger could get lost in this collection for a very long time. I imagine someone without a blog could get lost too, but then who would know? The collection is accessible by the general public. Just contact Curator for Comics and Cartoons Karen Green. Be sure to blog about what you find, or send me a few pictures and I'll blog about them for you.  Really, how hard can it be?

Why isn't Otto Soglow better known? He was pretty popular in his day. Help me keep his work in the public eye on Attempted Bloggery. I am looking for high-quality scans or photographs of original cartoon art by Soglow and other artists whose work appeared in magazines like College Humor or The New Yorker. Examples of rare or forgotten published work like this bank teller cartoon are always desired.


Quick Links to the Attempted Bloggery Archives

Otto Soglow

College Humor


02371

My Entry in the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #593

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I took a stab at entering The New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest #593 for November 20, 2017. The drawing is by Tom Cheney.

"I did receive your demands but I haven't
gotten around to them."


These captions weren't sharp enough:
"He's a cross between Martin Luther and Lex Luthor."
"What else do you want?"
"When did Pin the Amendment on the Lawyer become a game?"



Note:  Last week cartoonist Mick Stevens had all his ducks in a row. Line up for Contest #592.

This blogger has been stabbed in the back by Tom Cheney's caption contests before.

02372

A Powerful Dream: Otto Soglow in College Humor, September 1937

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A man asleep in bed dreams up some increasingly incredible feats of strength. But how will he feel by the morning? In this full-page cartoon from the September 1937 issue of College Humor, cartoonist Otto Soglow gives us six clean panels with no shading and no speech.


Otto Soglow
College Humor, Vol. 6, No. 1, September 1937, page 27



Note:  I photographed this cartoon in a copy of the September 1937 issue of College Humor, just one delightful page out of some 5,600 publications in the Steven Boss humor magazine collection. I found it, as you might very well guess, in the Rare Book and Manuscript Library of Columbia University. The comic art collection is always growing and is accessible to the general public. Just contact Curator for Comics and Cartoons Karen Green. She'll make sure you find what you're looking for and don't fall asleep in the stacks.

Does Otto Soglow's work leave you weak at the knees? Help me keep his art in the public eye right here on Attempted Bloggery. I am looking for high-quality scans or photographs of original cartoon art by Soglow and other artists of his ilk whose work appeared in magazines likeCollege Humor or The New Yorker. Please send along examples of rare or even forgotten published work like this beautiful dreamer cartoon.



Quick Links to the Attempted Bloggery Archives


Otto Soglow


College Humor


02373
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