
Wednesday, April 15, 2009
Cartooning: James Montgomery Flagg's Nervy Nat


In 1890 at the age of 12, James presented himself and a group of sketches at the offices of St. Nicholas Magazine, the leading illustrated children's publication of the time. He was shown to the office of one of the editors who looked at his drawings and determined that he showed promise. The editor praised the boy's work and encouraged his parents to seek out art training for him. Flagg took classes at the Art Students' League in New York, and within two years, he was a regular contributor to St. Nicholas, and Life magazine, and eventually landed a staff position at Judge. Alongside great artists like Grant Hamilton and Eugene Zimmerman, Flagg flourished, becoming one of the top illustrators of his day.

Flagg was very versatile, and his sketches of beautiful women were just as well drawn as his caricatured cartoons. He was outspoken and critical of the art community. He once said that "the difference between the artist and the illustrator is that the latter knows how to draw, eats three square meals a day, and can pay for them."
From 1903 to 1907, Flagg drew a comic strip for Judge titled, "Nervy Nat". Here are some examples of the strip from 1906 and 1907.












For more on pioneering cartoonists, see... Father of Cartooning: T. S. Sullivant, Cliff Sterrett's Polly & her Pals Part One and Part Two; Milt Gross Sunday Pages Part One, Part Two and Part Three; Harrison Cady's Birds' Eye Views and Rube Goldberg's Side Show
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
Labels: comic strips, james montgomery flagg, judge, magazine

































6 Comments:
Wow, just about every panel in Nervy Nat has fantastic posing and staging. A new favorite, thanks Steve!
Wow! This guy is great!
Thanks!
These are great - if these were in a complete and oversized collection I'd buy it... anyone listening? Fantagraphics? Drawn and Quarterly?
Stephen:
Thank you for posting the pages from Flagg's Nervy Nat-
One thing that strikes me is Nat's resemblance to the personality of W.C.Fields. These pages were published when Fields was touring Europe, America and the world as a top-billed Vaudeville act, and I cannot help but imagine that the young Fields may have read and enjoyed these stories and incorporated them into his later movie personae.
-Robert Steinhilber
I'm considering publishing an anthology highlighting the artists that worked at Judge around the turn of the century as a fundraiser for the archive. It wouldn't be complete by any means, but would that be something you would be interested in?
Terrific!!! I never heard of this strip til you put it up! Many thanks!
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