Above: Alfred Andriola and Mel Casson collaborate on this pair of not-so-innocent cherubs for the frontispiece.
Here
are a series of cartoons from the hardcover collection EVER SINCE ADAM AND EVE.
This is all just so much great stuff in this book, I'm scanning way too
much of it.
EVER SINCE ADAM AND EVE was co-edited by Alfred
Andriola and Mel Casson, and copyright 1955 by those two great
cartoonists as well. This collection is dedicated to and features a wide
variety of National Cartoonists Society cartoonists. The first series of scans from the book are here.
Of the 11 images below dealing with dating and teen angst, five are drawn by professional women cartoonists.
Above: Hilda Terry
sketches teenagers -- on the phone, talking, sitting, lounging,
dancing, goofing -- for the "Jean, Janes, and Growing Pains" chapter.
This looks so much like a page ripped out of her sketchpad. I don't know
if it is, but it looks like it. I wish there was more Hilda Terry in
print.
From the Mike lynch Cartoons blog:
More on her comic strip Teena.
Hilda Terry remembrance.
"He's ideal for Jane. He has all the qualities she likes to change in a boy."
Above
is George Clark, with his dry brush on pebble board, giving us another
deft look at middle America. One of my favorite originals that I won is a
Neighbors panel by George Clark, that I got from Don Orehek.
Related:
Some great originals by George Clark from the Mike Lynch Cartoons blog.
March 21, 1955 Time magazine on feature on George Clark."I'm trying to warn you about men, Alicia -- stop screaming 'How wonderful!'"
George
Lichty is another cartoonist with a loose style. Don't you love
Alicia's expression, and Lichty's choice to have her staring at the
reader?! Another sly, smoky glance like those angels that open the book.
More from his Grin and Bear It panels."Well, there's one thing -- she certainly isn't controversial."
I
like the soft, almost gauzy, wash that Barbara Shermund uses in this
slice of teenage life from days gone by.
More Barbara Shermund:
The Library of Congress exhibition and a profile by Michael Maslin
From the Dick Buchanan Files: Women Cartoonists: Barbara Shermund, Hilda Terry, Mary Gibson and Dorothy McKay 1935 - 1952
"I think I oughta drop Hughie . . . . I'm learning too much about boys from him, and not enough about men."
Hilda
Terry, who created the Teena newspaper comic strip, is neck-and-neck
with Marty Links for her ability to portray gangly teens.
Teena by Hilda Terry
Hilda Terry June 25, 1914 - October 13, 2006
Above
is a two page spread by Carl Rose. A name that's not familiar now, Rose
had a long and prolific cartoon career. His clients included This Week, The Atlantic Monthly, and The New York Times Magazine, among others. His seminal New Yorker cartoon with the mother and little girl at the dinner table is a classic:
MOTHER: It's broccoli, dear.
CHILD: I say it's spinach, and I say the hell with it.
Actually,
yes, Carl Rose drew it. As was accepted practice back in the early New
Yorker days, a writer wrote the line. In this case, the one and only
E.B. White.
Alfred Andriola shows he can draw lanky teens that out lank all others.
"No, this is not the home of Emmylou Merriweather -- this is Grand Central Station!"
Above is a cartoon by the creator of
Bobby Sox,
Marty Links,
"one of the top teen-age delinaeators," so states the book. Her
long-running comic outlived the bobby socks craze and it was
rechristened
Emmy Lou.
Related: More Bobby Sox
"Oh, Ronny, you shouldn't have. My father just planted that bush."
Here's the text that accompanies the above cartoon:
" ... Kate Osann, an equally deft artist, does Tizzy for Colliers."
Here are some more from her Tizzy collections:
Tizzy by Kate Osann
From the Dick Buchanan Files: Kate Osann's "Tizzy" 1953 - 1956
"Nothing doing! If this is Dutch treat, I'm handing over my money to the waiter myself!"
Any chance to show more of Irwin Caplan's designerly work. These two are on their way to the getting hitched for life, don'tcha think?
And last, one of the all-time champ cartoonists: Henry Syverson, with a message of love and loss!
More Syverson? OK!
Henry Syverson Cartoons