Sunday, April 19, 2009

Life Drawing Sunday 37: Michael Angelo Woolf

1. Riis' Pieces

July 18, 1895

On March 5, 1899, the day after Michael Angelo Woolf died from heart failure at his sister's house in Brooklyn, his obituary in the New York Times claimed, "Until his advent in newspaper work the comic picture was a mere vehicle for the presentation of a joke, as far as the American weekly was concerned. Mr. Woolf began the presentation of types. His characters were human beings. His favorite type was the waif, and he was known as the artist of waifs."

The waifs and other types that Woolf drew were most often from Five Points, and Mulberry Bend and other immigrant neighborhoods in New York's Lower East Side. These were the residents of the same tenements and alleys that Jacob Riis was photographing at the same time, although with different intentions.


Jacob Riis, "The Bend"



February 22, 1894
Riis chronicled the horrific living conditions and despair he found among "the other half" . Some of his pictures are blatantly staged, but their lack of candidness isn't unusual for the time and is beside the point anyway. Riis was not interested in making art, although he arguably did. His photographs were meant to serve an agenda (which has been the subject of some recent scrutiny) and to shock society into taking reformative action, which it definitely did. (The Five Points neighborhood was knocked down and paved over, essentially wiped off the map.) To this end, the chapters in his books that dealt with the lives of the children born into these slums were probably the most effective. They were the innocent victims of poverty.

The "artist of waifs" devoted a lot his attention to these children, too. Woolf's drawings, without the stylistic bombast of a Gibson or a Sullivant and rarely printed larger than a quarter of a page, had a quirky charm and a sketched on-the-spot, reportorial honesty to them. The Times said, "To those who remember and who reveled in the old, rude, forceful school of newspaper portraiture which preceded the present more artistic but not more original school the death of Michael Angelo Woolf comes as news of the loss of a personal friend."

There's no evidence that Woolf knew Jacob Riis personally or shared his interest in reform. Woolf did on occasion do a drawing that could be considered social commentary, especially if the occasion was Christmas or Thanksgiving, but he rarely editorialized, at least not within the pages of Life. Still, the chance that the two newspapermen never crossed paths seems awfully slim.



April 28, 1887
Jacob Riis, "Hell's Kitchen and Sebastopol"







Jacob Riis, "The Street Their Playground"
January 16, 1896







July 21, 1887
Jacob Riis,"A growler gang in session [the "Montgomery Guards'at the West 37 Street dock]"








Jacob Riis, "Rushing the growler [beer-can]"


April 16, 1896








August 25, 1887
Jacob Riis, Old house on a Bleecker Street back lot, between Mercer and Greene Streets











Jacob Riis, Members of the gang showing how they "did the trick"

July 21, 1892








July 28, 1892

Woolf's eye was every bit as unflinching as Riis' camera was. That he found humor in the lives of the tenement dwellers, both children and adults, shouldn't suggest any lack of sympathy for their plight. The humor brings these characters to life, includes them in the human race. This is something that Riis' photographs, in spite of their depicting actual, living human beings, struggle to convey. Whether it comes from the harsh light of the magnesium flash or the shadowy suspicions Riis had about the moral rectitude of his voiceless subjects, there is a subtle emphasis placed on the otherness of the other half. To find out what the living conditions of the tenements were, Jacob Riis' work is essential but tthe picture of what life was like in these neighborhoods is incomplete without Michael Angelo Woolf's drawings.







February 3, 1887



September 9, 1897





February 8, 1894





March 22, 1894


July 29, 1897


2. Romance and Melodrama

Michael Angelo Woolf was born in London in 1837, and moved to America with his family at the age of twelve. About the time of the Civil War, he dedicated himself fully to a drawing career, gaining a position on the Daily Graphic, the first American illustrated newspaper. He went to Paris to study under Pierre Edouard Frère, and returned to New York to become a mainstay at Harper's magazines. Woolf became a regular contributor to Life soon after the magazine was launched in 1883.

Although he'd shown an interest in drawing from childhood and had even made a few sales at an early age Woolf's youth was spent in pursuit of a career on the stage. According to the New York Times, he was managed by Col. William E. Sinn "at the Chestnut St. Theater





March 1, 1894.
in Philadelphia. He and Col. Sinn remained warm friends throughout the rest of his life, and Mr. Woolf always liked to tell stories of his early barnstorming days."

Woolf's theatrical background may have showed itself in the attention he paid to capturing the various dialects of the Lower East Side residents and in the lampooning of melodramatic stage and dime-novel speech the children in his drawings often displayed. Whatever the inspiration for it may have been, Woolf certainly wrote some of the wordiest captions ever, no small achievement for a 19th Century cartoonist.








November 24, 1887





September 15, 1887




March 19, 1896





July 28, 1887





February 22, 1894




October 14, 1897





October 20, 1887





October 21, 1897


Next: The Gangs of New York

Sunday, February 15, 2009

Life Drawing Sunday 36: More Rea Irvin

Part Two: 1915-1916



January 14, 1915







January 14, 1915




January 21, 1915




February 11, 1915






February 11, 1915






February 18, 1915







March 4, 1915




March 18, 1915




April 8, 1915






May 20, 1915





June 10, 1915




June 10, 1915







June 10, 1915





September 16, 1915





September 24, 1915





October 21, 1915





October 28, 1915





October 28, 1915





January 13, 1916








January 27, 1916







March 16, 1916





June 6, 1916





June 22, 1916




July 20, 1916




August 24, 1916





September 7, 1916





October 12, 1916





November 30, 1916





December 14, 1916

Sunday, February 08, 2009

Life Drawing Sunday 35: Rea Irvin

Part One: 1908-1914




The obituaries published in both the New York and Los Angeles Times upon Rea Irvin's death in 1972, at the age of 90, give the impression that he did little else but create this doofus for the cover of the first issue of the New Yorker and hang out at the Players and the Dutch Treat Club. Irvin's place in literary history as the first art director— the first employee, in fact— of The New Yorker is appropriately noted but there's no mention made of the typeface and the design he created for the magazine, which has remained practically unchanged for 83 years. (For that see this article from Print.) It's all about the fop, which is a nice enough drawing and, god knows, plenty iconic. It's probably the most well-known magazine cover ever. It also has the distinction of being among the rarest of illustration jobs, one that paid a lifetime annuity¹. But it is far from the only New Yorker cover he did, and there is a tremendous body of Irvin's work from nearly two decades preceding the birth of the New Yorker that also goes unremarked upon. The obituaries barely hint at what the World Encyclopedia of Cartoons described as "Irvin's enormous impact on American cartooning."

His simplified, posterlike drawings were almost revolutionary and inspired a generation of imitators. His composition was flawlessly attractive, and his figures, for all their animation and exaggeration, were anatomically sound. ...He drew many series of full-pagers for Life, illustrated many books, created the cover design for the New Yorker, and helped shape the magazine's formidable approach to cartooning, certainly one of the major forces in American graphic arts.


Rea Irvin was born in San Francisco in 1881, and studied there at what was then the Hopkins Art Institute. He worked at several newspapers in San Francisco and in Honolulu before briefly pursuing a career as an actor in 1903. Shortly thereafter he arrived in New York , an illustrator once again.

January 2, 1908.
The drawings posted here are from the beginning of Rea Irvin's association with Life, up until the arbitrarily chosen stopping point of 1914. According to a short biographical sketch published in the December 14, 1911 issue, it took Irvin five years to find his way to Life's offices. That would make the spinster cartoon at the right one of the earliest, if not the very first, drawings he did for Life.

Brendan Gill wrote in his obituary for Irvin in the New Yorker, "His style as an artist was decorative and was deliberately without depth of perspective; it had the quality of Chinese calligraphy, though with a Western boldness of color. He had the patience of a skilled craftsman and could draw in almost any mode." Ironically, for an artist who would essentially be remembered for a single drawing, no one at Life was more untethered to a single style than Irvin, including his contemporary and fellow Westerner Fred Cooper. There may be a typical Irvin drawing style from which everything else he did departs, but what is consistent throughout his work is perfect composition, amazing color sense (this will be more apparent in future posts) and wit.



December 8, 1910.





December 15, 1910.





September 7, 1911.




December 14, 1911.




September 12, 1912.






January 23, 1913.






March 27, 1913.





March 27, 1913.





April 24, 1913.



October 23, 1913.



January 29, 1914.






May 21, 1914.






May 28, 1914.




September 10, 1914




October 1, 1914.






October 8, 1914.




October 29, 1914.


Letters of a Japanese Schoolboy

In 1913 Irvin illustrated the "Letters of a Japanese Schoolboy" for Life. The feature, created by the humorist Wallace Irwin, originally ran in Colliers in 1907 and later appeared in newspapers and books. It purported to be a collection of observations on American life by a visiting Japanese "boy," the 35-year-old Hashimuro Togo and written in an unlikely pidgin dialect.

It's the illustrations that matter here, anyway. This assignment provided Irvin with opportunity to play with the style and design of Japanese prints and brushwork and to mimic in pen and ink the effects of ukiyo-e wood block printing while remaining modern and American. Irvin did two drawings for each installment; the first pair of drawings below couldn't offer a better example of his versatility.








October 23, 1913.










February 5, 1914.











April 23, 1914.









August 6, 1914.









August 13, 1914.









September 24, 1914.









October 8, 1914.




Other Rea Irvin links:
His 1930 comic strip, The Smyths.
A list of illustrated works by Ellis Parker Butler, including "The Pet" from Redbook and "Why He Married Her" from Green Book.



1. In the June 10, 1972 issue of the New Yorker, Brendan Gill recalls (confesses?) that "[a] few years ago, an editor wrote to him in St. Croix, 'Another year gone by! And soon again the anniversary cover. How are you? Don't forget to write.' With his customary playfulness, Irvin returned the note, slightly emended: 'to write' had been neatly inked out and 'the check' inserted in its place."

Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Adieu, yourself.

Brilliant, unbelievably prolific author John Updike is dead at the age of 76. At one time it was his ambition to become a cartoonist. Who knows? He might not have been so bad at that either. A small sampling of his drawings for the Harvard Lampoon.



February 8, 1951


April, 1954



April, 1954