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AUGUST 2008
DR. SEUSS Exhibit Showroom Hours Wed. - Thurs. - Fri. 10:30 - 5 Saturday 10:30 - 4 Other times visit by appointment
WEB inquiries or to ORDER call 1-800-627-8223 or e-mail us |
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By late Nineteenth Century America was evolving from an agrarian society to an urban one, from an Anglo-Saxon heritage to a diverse Melting Pot, from politics by the elite to a populist approach to governing. Life was unsettled. A whole new genre of weekly satire magazines came to life, their task to tell it like it is, to deflate the stuffed-shirted leaders of the day, and to offer an avenue for writers, essayists, and poets of the day.
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In addition to typeset words, these humorous magazines developed a trademarked image new to American readers the handsome chromolithographic cartoon. In 1877 Joseph Keppler changed American publishing by creating Puck, a weekly tabloid (in todays terms) magazine that featured full color cartoons on the first, last, and center spread pages. At first, he did the artwork himself, but eventually hired others to draw even more cartoons. What differentiates Kepplers work from cartoonists like Thomas Nast was that Keppler devoted many of his Puck cartoons to satiric dissections of American life instead of focusing only on political headlines of American politics.
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The full color cartoons by Keppler and others were identifiable by a host of skillfully-drawn caricatures of important contemporaries in an era before artists had readily available photographs to work from. The human likenesses mingled with a cartoonists stable of symbols identify these magazine cartoons as the hallmark of a turbulent, changing era. |
| Puck color cartoons even today remain not only a refreshing snapshot of a colorful period in American history, but an artistic accomplishment as well. These cartoons were produced as stone lithographs which makes each of them a work of art, appearing in just one issue, and produced in a very limited quantity and very collectible. Despite the number of copies produced for circulation, copies were intended for use at that moment in time. Now, a century later few examples remain, and even fewer in fine condition. The Art-cades collection of cartoons from humorous weeklies includes both the single and double-spread color artwork from Puck, Judge, and other magazines. |
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Website ©2008 Kings Court Communications, Inc.
All displayed artwork © by artist and/or publisher
and is for illustration and promotion purposes only.
All rights reserved. None may be used, in whole or
in part, for any other purpose. "Webportfolio" and the
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