Saturday, May 03, 2008
Caricature: Arthur Szyk The New Order
This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see reason number 6 on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great posts about golden age illustration.

Arthur Szyk was born in Poland and began painting at the age of four. He studied art in Paris until the outbreak of World War I, when he travelled East to study Mohammedan art. In 1914, he joined the Russian army, and later served as an officer in a guerrilla regiment in the Polish army. He married in 1921 and moved back to Paris, where he lived and painted until 1931. Szyk received many important commissions during this time... He illuminated the Covenant of the League of Nations, painted a series of miniatures dealing with the American Revolution that hangs in the White House, and spent three years working on an illumination of the Haggadah, the story of the Jews' flight from Egypt which was dedicated to the King of England.
In 1940, Szyk relocated to Canada, eventually settling in New York City in 1941. Szyk's political cartoons, which were published in the newspaper PM, were described by art critic, Thomas Craven as being "as compact as a bomb, extraordinarily lucid in statement, firm and incisive of line, and deadly in their characterizations." The illustrations we scanned today are from a collection of Szyk's political cartoons called "The New Order"..
Caricature is the foundation of cartooning. It involves the exaggeration of features to highlight and focus personality traits. Szyk was a master of caricature. His ability to clearly express the arrogance, irony and evil behind the trumped up facade of civilized behavior spoke louder than words. "The New Order" is a rare book. It was ahead of its time when it was published in 1941, before the United States entered the Second World War. ASIFA-Hollywood was fortunate to locate a clean copy to digitize.











Thanks
Stephen Worth
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
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Labels: caricature, szyk, war





























6 Comments:
I've noticed that whenever I "digg" a post in this blog it takes me to "Pinups: Early Interlandi Playboy Cartoons". Unless the post is actually about "Pinups: Early Interlandi Playboy Cartoons" shouldn't it produce some other result? Something like the actual subject of the post?
A great post! Szyck was a terrific artist! My favorite pictures are the color ones but the most poignant one is arguably the black and white picture called "The Protector." You feel sorry for the tired SS man who traded his humanity for a cool suit.
Thanks also for the pin-up pictures! Wow, they could paint in those days!
Anonymous, the trick to digging is to click on the title of the article in the sidebar and then digg it. You can't digg an article from the main page for some weird technical reason.
Thanks
Steve
Wonder if Mort Drucker ever saw Szyck's art (or the other way around) - some of those horses in Four Horseman could've come straight Mort's pen...
The New Order is great, Steve. I hope at some point you will also make available Szyk's Nazi cartoons for Esquire. They came out after The New Order, and Szyk devoted more time and attention to each picture. Many think they were his masterpieces when it came to political cartoons.
Terrific post, and thanks so much for sharing these images. I have a 1945 edition of Hans Christian Andersen's Fairy Tales that was illustrated by Szyk, that was handed down from my brother to my sister to me. I always loved the strange and evocative imagery in that book. It wasn't until about 5 years ago, on a trip to the Huntington Library in Pasadena, when I saw a poster of Szyk's illustrations for the Canterbury Tales, that I learned exactly how important Szyk was. This post gives me yet another perspective on the man who helped form my visual landscape as a child.
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