Showing posts with label PIT GROVE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PIT GROVE. Show all posts

Saturday, February 15, 2014

Great Cartoons of the World Series 7, part 7

Here is the seventh part of the book Great Cartoons of the World, Series 7 from 1973.

Chon Day in The Saturday Evening Post
Guillermo Mordillo
Charles Elmer Martin
Vlasta Zábranský for Rohác
Charles Addams for the New Yorker.This cartoon isn't that different from what's been going on in Brooklyn for the past ten years.

Editor John Bailey writes of the cartoonist in the introduction to the book:

The fascinating thing is, one cannot tell before meeting him whether an artist will be like his work, or will not be. Charles Addams does look slightly sinister, but the moment he speaks you realize he is not going to behead you. He is gentle and cultivated, and his creeping creatures are strictly the creation of his genuine spooky imagination.
Hans Moser
Donald Reilly for The New Yorker
Jean-Jacques Sempé for Editions Denoël
Pit Grove
Adolf Born for Dikobraz
Whitney Darrow, Jr.

Saturday, February 1, 2014

Great Cartoons of the World Series 7, part 5

Editor John Bailey says in the introduction to the book after describing some of the contributors to the book that he's met:

It develops some cartoonists are like their work, and some are not. The “why” is always the niggling thing of anything—the endless “why” that people love to diddle with in their heads. Why is Garbo mysterious and Sophia Loren not? Why was Paris fashionable in the nineteenth century, and a dull bore in the twentieth?

To get further, what is the reader like? The cartoonist has an immense curiosity to know. Dear reader, what are you like? I mean, what are you really like?


Boris Drucker for The New Yorker
Michael Ffolkes
George Price, also in the New Yorker. He's mentioned as one of the cartoonists in the book thusly:

George Price is like his work, but not like the people he draws,, whom he has observed carefully, and whom he deeply loves, or perhaps hates. They have become a full-blooded, consistent cast of characters through whom he conveys ideas about life. One can always count on them to say something pertinent on such subjects as Women's Lib, or ecology, which is surprising, since the whole awful crowd seem to stay in the kitchen most of the time with a monkey wrench and a can of beer. Yet Price is apparently able to express anything through them. I'm not sure if he's saying something antiquatedly sexist here, but apologize anyway.
Miroslav Barták for
I didn't realize when I was scanning that these next two images by Tony Munzlinger are the same cartoon.
Eldon Dedini
Jules Stauber
Ed Arno
William O'Brian

Saturday, January 4, 2014

Great Cartoon of the World, Series 7, part 1

There were several volumes of this series, one every year, which I've been posting. This one is from 1973 and also edited by John Bailey.

Jean-Jacques Sempé
Michael Ffolkes
Jean-Jacques Sempé
Charles Elmer Martin, who did this The New Yorker cartoon, is written about in the introduction thusly: Charles Martin (C.E.M.) is an impressive figure who wears a light beard and looks like one of Robin Hood's men. He has a lively, inquiring mind, is constantly looking around to see what is going on, and has a vast appreciation of textures and moods. His drawings are surprising in their delicacy, at times approaching filigree work.
It says of Charles Saxon, another New Yorker cartoonist: Saxon does not look like his work—close-knit features, an open, alert expression, the solid muscularity of the athlete, and a cool, keen eye—but when he starts to talk about his work. He is emotional, even saturnine about life. His private sense of humor can rarely be detected in conversation, but it is sufficiently evident in his drawings. He has taken material of the twentieth century, has narrowed it down to a comfortable section that includes the upper middle drawer of the upper middle class, and has become a leading authority on it.
New Yorker's Stan Hunt is: ...an excellent example of the work matching the artist. He is hypersensitive with a special insight into the fears that haunt people—illness, failure, and that indefinable feeling that something will get you. All expressed in his cartoons right on the nose.
Boris Drucker is ...saturnine, gloomy, and philosophical, but his work is funny and gay. There is a genuine laugh connected with every cartoon he draws, and he is one of the best gagmen in the business. He looks like a Dosteofskian journalist leading a kind of Kafkaesque like, but somewhere in the depths of Drucker there is a lot of humor.
[Frank] Modell has what has been called “a ready wit”. His work is a true expression of his personality. He is rascally, cynical, and bubbling over with the fun of everything. Very little surprises him. There is not much naiveté in his work or in his nature. The subjects he covers are the subjects he is really interested in, and he does not force himself into any vein that goes against what he can observe easily in his life.
The editor in his intro doesn't mention the foreign cartoonists featured in the book, like Miroslav Barták...
...or Stanislav Holý.
Charles Addams
Forty years ago a plane crashing into a building didn't have the weight it does now, like in this cartoon by Pit Grove.

Saturday, July 13, 2013

GREAT CARTOONS OF THE WORLD SERIES 9:The Final Chapter

This is it for Great Cartoons of the World, Series Nine.

Here are the rest of the cartoons forthwith:

George Booth for The New Yorker  photo 7-13-1_zpsc3c092bd.jpg John Glashan  photo 7-13-3_zpsbd2412ee.jpg Jules Stauber  photo 7-13-4_zps4ecdd714.jpg Frank Modell for New Yorker  photo 7-13-5_zps6e5337e8.jpg Pit Grove, pen name for Alfred Max Plitz  photo 7-13-6_zps23af114e.jpg Donald Reilly for New Yorker  photo 7-13-7_zps51d461c6.jpg Edward Koren for New Yorker  photo 7-13-8_zpsb45b9a09.jpg Norman Thelwell in Punch  photo 7-13-9_zpsbbf84002.jpg John Glashan again  photo 7-13-10_zps3e9824fb.jpg Adolf Born  photo 7-13-11_zps5ed1abf3.jpg Adolf Born again

Hey, born again! You get it?  photo 7-13-12_zps6f8a886d.jpg John Glashan  photo 7-13-13_zps444da440.jpg Jerszy Flisak  photo 7-13-14_zps25d56416.jpg Next Week: Great Cartoons of the World, Series 4. Why am I skipping around, you ask? Well, because I ordered the fourth volume through Alibris. and since I was going to order the volume I wrongly got eventually I decided to keep it, and I had nothing to post on Saturdays so I used that. So there.