Tuesday, July 31, 2012
Rudolph Dirks (1877-1968) – Katzenjammer, Kids & Kauderwelsch
2012 cover of first edition
A few months back a book was published on a classic strip maker that may have escaped the notice of most English language readers. The book is written by young Tim Eckhorst and published by Deich Verlag in Germany.
The word ‘Kauderwelsch’ in its title – ‘Rudolph Dirks; Katzenjammer, Kids & Kauderwelsch’ – translates to ‘bafflegab’.
Tim Eckhorst was born in the same small town as Rudolph Dirks in Heide, Germany. The house where Gus and Rudolph Dirks were born is still standing and a street is named in his memory. Brother John Dirks passed his entire collection on to the town of Heide.
The Dirks ‘Katzenjammer Kids’ strip
At the moment the book Rudolph Dirks; Katzenjammer, Kids & Kauderwelsch is only available in the original German language edition. You can look inside the book HERE, see a trailer (with wonderful vintage film footage) HERE or order a copy HERE.
Rudolph Dirks Way, Heide, Germany
Book Presentation
Dirks House, Heide, Germany
Sunday, July 29, 2012
TRUTH, ever changing – weekly 1881-98, monthly 1899-1905
by Richard Samuel West
Truth covers for June 2, 1894,
and July 14, 1894
and July 14, 1894
Truth, June 2, 1894,
comic strip page by George Luks
On June 2, 1894, Richard F. Outcault introduces
the character who would become the Yellow Kid
the character who would become the Yellow Kid
Truth, November 14, 1896,
Rose O’Neill full-page illustration
Rose O’Neill full-page illustration
Truth center-spread, June 2, 1894
Truth covers, December 29, 1894, and May 9, 1896
Truth center-spread, October 17, 1896
Truth’s quarterly, 1895 and 1897 covers
Truth covers from 1898 when the magazine
was quarto sized (the same size as Time magazine),
September 7 and 21, 1898
was quarto sized (the same size as Time magazine),
September 7 and 21, 1898
Covers of Truth’s 1899-1901 incarnation,
May and July, 1901
May and July, 1901
By 1902 Truth was in decline,
March and May covers
March and May covers
* Richard Samuel West’s new book Iconoclast in Ink; The Political Cartoons of Jay N. “Ding” Darling can be purchased HERE.
Labels:
George Luks,
Richard Samuel West,
Rose O’Neill,
Truth,
Yellow Kid
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Brain-openers in illustration 1819-2002
Brain-openers in illustration depict the human head spiked or sucked, opened up, overflowing or downright exploding. Today, the result is picture rhyme.
1
1 [1819] Brain spikes.
A band of little devils forcefully open up a sick man’s head. ‘Head
ache,’ a captioned etching by George Cruikshank, published in colour by
G. Humphrey, 27 St. James’s St., London, on Friday, February 12. 2
2 [1909] Brain tap. An enormous
mosquito gorges himself on a drinker’s head. Winsor McCay signing as
Silas, in a page of his ‘Dream of the Rarebit Fiend’ strip series
(detail), published in various American newspapers, this dream on
Saturday, June 5.
3
3 [1911] Brain tap. A giant mosquito gorges himself on a sitting man’s head. Winsor McCay, in a page of his ‘Midsummer Day Dreams’ strip series (detail), published in various American newspapers.
4
4 [1861] Brain blast. A frustrated dentist resorts to blowing up his patient’s head. Édouard Chevret, in page 14 of his 38-page French comic strip novel ‘La Perroquettomanie,’ self-published.
5
5 [1869] Brain smokers. Addlebrained addicts smoke out their brains to the tune of scorched old fiddler Nick-Otin. Fully titled ‘Old Nick-Otin Stealing “Away the Brains” of His Devotees’, a captioned cartoon in woodcut by N.N., in the London weekly Punch, Saturday, January 16, page 21.
6
6 [1911] Brain blast. A sneezing man’s head explodes. Winsor McCay signing as Silas, in a page of his ‘Dream of the Rarebit Fiend’ strip series (detail).
7
7 [1906] Brain blast. Showered with compliments, the head of strip maker “Silas” gets bigger and bigger until it explodes. Winsor McCay signing as Silas, full page of his ‘Dream of the Rarebit Fiend’ strip series, Thursday, November 22.
8
8 [1902] Brain blast. A new way to graft trees blows a botanist’s top off. Christophe, in ‘Fantaisies de botaniste,’ captioned cartoon in the French weekly Soleil du Dimanche.
9
9 [c.1890] Brain mug. Cartoon of a man with steaming character mug (detail) by Adolf Öberlander, in the Munich weekly Fliegende Blätter.
10
10 [c.1901] Brain jug. Ceramic character jug in variable brown glaze, Martin Bros., London and Southall.
11
11 [1908] Brain stretch. A man’s head becomes a putty-like mass of jelly. Winsor McCay signing as Silas, in his ‘Dream of the Rarebit Fiend’ strip series (detail), Saturday, September 26.
12 [1891] Brain-opener. One of many English celebrities exposed by Phil May – this one titled ‘The Duke of Cambridge’ – number 15 (not 14) in his series of caricatures ‘On the Brain,’ published in the London weekly Pick-Me-Up, September 12.
13
13 [1891] Brain-opener. ‘Mr. Punch’ by Phil May, in his series ‘On the Brain,’ in the London weekly Pick-Me-Up.
14
14 [1891] Brain-opener. ‘Sir Edward Lawson’ by Phil May, in his series ‘On the Brain,’ in the London weekly Pick-Me-Up.
15
15 [1906] Brain-opener. An absentminded man takes the lid of his head to count his marbles. Winsor McCay signing as Silas, full page of his ‘Dream of the Rarebit Fiend’ strip series, Thursday, October 25.
16
16 [1912] Brain paint. ‘Inspiration,’ self-portrait by German illustrator-painter Heinrich Kley, in his picture book ‘Leut’ und Viecher,’ Bavarian/Austrian dialect which translates to ‘People and [crazy] Animals,’ page 13.
17
17 [1952] Brain fill. ‘Filling Ingot Molds’ by Russian-American illustrator-caricaturist Boris Artzybasheff. Detail of full-page illustration from the ‘Machinalia’ chapter in his picture book ‘As I See.’
18 [c.1950] Brain-opener. American comic strip author Fred Laswell presents his strip character Snuffy Smith in a self-caricature, ‘Fred Lasswell by hisse’f.’
19
19 [1961] Brain-opener. American cartoonist Vip (Virgil Partch), self-caricature on the cover of his Gold Medal picture pocket book ‘Cartoons Out of My Own Head.’
20 [2002] Brain blast. “Chief scientist of Alias Wavefront Bill Buxton demonstrates what Maya, cheaper than before though still ridiculously expensive, can do in this ad that probably didn’t make it onto TV from the looks of it. VFX by Topix.” See the one minute video HERE.
A special Note of Thanks to: Ulrich Merkl, Antoine Sausverd, Mike Lynch, Ianus Keller and François Caradec, plus virginia.edu, carters.com.au, gallica.bnf.france, coconino-world.com
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
A “Literary Tavern” Visit, with a Peep at Some “Punch” People
‘A “Literary Tavern” Visit, with a Peep at Some “Punch” People,’ pp.56-64, in ‘Lions: Living and Dead; or, Personal recollections of the great and gifted,’ by John Ross Dix (1800?-1865,) London, Partridge and Oakey, 1852.
Cruikshank folding plate strip from ‘The Comic Almanack For 1849,’ George Cruikshank, Second Series, 1844-53. From a 1912 reprint by Chatto & Windus.
Cruikshank portrait from ‘An Essay on the Genius of George Cruikshank’ by William Makepeace Thackeray, London: George Redway, 1884 HERE.
Cruikshank portrait from ‘An Essay on the Genius of George Cruikshank’ by William Makepeace Thackeray, London: George Redway, 1884 HERE.
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
Pictures from Puck (1914)
Heinrich Kley
Vol. LXXV, No. 1940, May 9, 1914
Heinrich Kley
Vol. LXXV, No. 1943, May 30, 1914
Raeburn Van Buren
Vol. LXXV, No. 1942, May 23, 1914
Joseph Keppler Jr.
Vol. LXXV, No. 1935, April 11, 1914
L.M. Glackens
Vol. LXXV, No. 1927, February 7, 1914
Gordon Grant
Vol. LXXV, No. 1927, February 7, 1914
E. Baker
Vol. XXLV, No. 1933, March 21, 1914
Joseph Keppler Jr.
Vol. LXXV, No. 1934, March 28, 1914
L.M. Glackens
Vol. LXXV, No. 1929, February 21, 1914
Harry G. Peters
Vol. LXXV, No. 1928, February 14, 1914
Labels:
Fairy Tales,
Heinrich Kley,
Pictures from Puck 1914,
Puck
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