Friday Spill: Washington Post Article Of Interest… Liza Donnelly’s “How We Draw Ourselves”; Latest Addition To The Spill Library…A 1944 Collection: “He Who Laughs — Lasts!”

Washington Post Article Of Interest…Liza Donnelly’s “How We Draw Ourselves” 

Bishakh Som, Amy Whang, Sara Lautman, Roz Chast, Alison Bechdel, Sarah Akinterinwa, Mads Horwath.

From The Washington Post, December 2, 2023, “How We Draw Ourselves: Alison Bechdel, Bishakh Som and others reflect on cartoons, gender and feminism” 

Long-time New Yorker cartoonist, Liza Donnelly interviews Alison Bechdel, Bishakh Som, Amy Hwang, Sara Lautman, Roz Chast, Sarah Akinterinwa, and Mads Horwath.

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Latest Addition To The Spill Library: A 1944 Norwegian Cartoon Collection 

An interesting addition to the Spill library this week is a 1944 Norwegian cartoon collection, He Who Laughs — Lasts!, produced while that country was occupied during WWII.

Some excerpts of the accompanying text: “Freedom of expression was abolished when the Nazis invaded Norway [April 9, 1940]. The Press was placed under rigid censorship…the stories illustrated in the following pages reveal the qualities of a nation, the fibre of a people who are fundementally alien to the degrading pattern of the the new order…

…One of the Norwegian people’s most dangerous weapons — one of the weapons which the Nazis fear most — is the popular wit…that is that weapon which hits the Nazis daily. Like the stinging lashes of a whip.”

 

I came across this book while searching for more information about Johan Bull and, hopefully, a collection of his work.  Here’s his Spill A-Z entry: 

Johan Bull (photograph dated 1934, courtesy of the Bull family) Born c. 1894, Oslo. Died Stowe, Vermont, Sept. 1945. New Yorker work (cartoons): July 4, 1925 – Oct. 22, 1927 *his NYTs obit says he contributed to The New Yorker until 1930, perhaps the last three years he contributed spot drawings(?). 

I did not find a Johan Bull collection, but I did come across the below, which comes awfully close. Of the forty-one cartoons in the book, thirty-seven of them are by Mr. Bull.

Here’s one by Mr. Bull:

Mr. Bull’s New Yorker colleague the great Gluyas Williams* contributed one drawing to the book: 

More on Bull:

New Yorker history buffs might recall that Johan Bull was the artist used for Corey Ford‘s twenty part series, “The Making Of A Magazine” (it ran in The New Yorker during its first year of publication, beginning in the issue of August 8, 1925).

It was within this series  — in its first installment – that the name “Eustace Tilley” was first used to identify Rea Irvin’s top-hatted gentleman who appeared on the magazine’s very first cover.

Left: a paperback collection of “The Making Of A Magazine” (a hardcover version also exists). You can see Mr. Tilley off to the left on the cover. 

 

Below: Johan Bull’s drawing of Tilley in Corey Ford’s first “Making Of A Magazine” piece. 

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*The Gluyas Williams Spill A-Z entry: 

Gluyas Williams (above left undated; right:1975) Born, San Francisco, 1888. Died, Boston, Mass., 1982. One of the pillars of Harold Ross’s stable of artists, and one of Ross’s favorite cartoonists. His beautiful full page drawings were a regular feature in the magazine. Mr. Williams illustrated a number of Robert Benchley’s collections, providing the cover art as well as illustrations. NYer work: March 13, 1926 – Aug 25, 1951. Key collections: The Gluyas Williams Book ( Doubleday, Doran & Co., 1929), The Gluyas Williams Gallery (Harper, 1956). Website: http://www.gluyaswilliams.com/

 

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