Showing posts with label Edwina. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Edwina. Show all posts

Monday, December 23, 2024

Don't Open Till XMas...!

 


Under the Tree...
More 
Surprises!

by Rick Marschall

I have been sharing Christmas cards and drawings from my collection, and I wanted to share a rare "corporate" card, and then miscellaneous cards from a variety of artists... no theme except Christmas itself. All the cards were produced for the three Fs -- family, friends, and fans. That is, not for stationers marketing in stores. Enjoy!


Back during the high-flying (literally) days of EC Comics, this was the "corporate" card Bill Gaines sent out. Among the elves are John Severin, Maries Severin, Al Williamson, Jack Davis, Al Feldstein, Harvey Kurtzman, Will Elder, Joe Orlando, Wally Wood, and Bernie Krigstein.





As with many of the cards here, if a Christmas came and went without certain cartooning friends' cards, it would feel like a bleak midwinter. Wonderful Edwina Dumm, the creator of creator of Tippie the dog and Jaspurr the cat (her strip was the long-running Cap Stubbs and Tippie), sent cards every year. Some were privately printed; some were hand-drawn. As my children met her, and she cherished them, she often wrote greetings to them too.



This card was sent by Sidney Smith, before The GumpsThis 



In the last year of his life, the greatest mixing in a touch of his perennial themes. He was optimistic about the world's future...



Hal Foster, sans Prince Valiant



Fred Lasswell, in his early Barney Google and Snuffy Smith cards, emulated the style and shading that the strip's creator Billy DeBeck used in his cards.




Even after retirement from his great Toonerville Folks panel and strip, Fontaine Fox sent out cards -- literally, postcards. His drawn greeting was printed, but every card would have some pen-and-ink addition, and, always, hand-coloring.   




The great (and great friend) Al Kilgore usually sent custom-drawn images. In 1964 he reprinted a daily strip of his great BullwinkleThe great (and great friend) Al Kilgore usually sends custom-drawn images. In 1964 he reprinted a daily strip 



How to read a Nancy Christmas card...?



The great Cliff Sterrett drew Polly and ALL her pals, ca. 1927




Walt Scott's card was a custom silk-screen printed, a true and charming craft-driven creation. The characters are his classic Little People from his Sunday comic strip. 



















Sunday, June 7, 2020

A Crowded Life in Comics –


Associations.


By Rick Marschall

It is the hardest thing in the world these days, especially for a writer and former political cartoonist like me, not to spot an association or make a reference to the turbulent events in the news these days. Even when I thank the mailman I want to voice my opinions on current headlines; if I sign a receipt I want to add a comment and a caricature or two.

So. I will randomly address, here, random cartoon-related items of random moments of my Crowded Life in the comics world. “Associations”… because everyday lately logic is losing its association with… Whoops. Keep your hands on the wheel.

In the rare-book and collectibles games, “associations” are when an item has two interesting, often unexpected, and usually significant aspects. An “association copy” of a biography, for instance, might have the author’s inscription to the subject. I will share a few serendipitous “finds” I happened upon as a collector or as a friend of cartoonists. Fun surprises.

The first “association” is obvious – one famous cartoonist’s letter to another famous cartoonist. What increases its interest is the content, complaining about the comics business of the day, and the increasing headaches of producing a strip. By the contents we can see that Harold Gray (Little Orphan Annie) and Al Capp (Li’l Abner) already have exchanged notes of mutual admiration – a surprise to cartoon historians, because at the time Gray was probably the most right-wing of strip cartoonists; and Al Capp – then – was an iconic left-winger. But, Leapin’ Lizards, in 1952 they were brothers under the skin.


Then we’ll have a couple lessons in browsing second-hand book shops and used-book sales: what not to do, mostly. As a bibliomaniac, when I have the time – and even when I really don’t – I try to take extra time to look at books that barely interest me or would be a duplicate; or presents itself as a downgrade from a book back home. For instance, years ago at a neighborhood book sale I saw a copy of Howard Pyle’s Robin Hood. I had a copy, another first edition (it was a best-seller so is relatively easy to find), and in better condition, in my library. But… worth a look. Yes, it was. There was a bookplate, hand-drawn, by a previous owner: Norman Rockwell. The 30-second browse was a good investment. Especially at a neighborhood sale, where the bookplate went inexplicably unnoticed.


At a top-drawer New York City bookstore, in its rare-book room, I found a terrific copy of Chats et Autres Betes (Cats and Other Beasts), a deluxe, thick, heavy volume of drawings, paintings, studies, and lithographs of cats by the incomparable Theodise-Alexandre Steinlen. Steinlen during La Belle Epoque was known for cartoons, posters, social protest, calendar art… and cat drawings, maybe his favorite preoccupation and ultimately perhaps his great legacy. The volume is printed on heavy laid paper; its prints tipped in and covered with tissue guards – number 174 of a limitation of 500. It was heavy in more ways than one. When I arrived home I felt like I found a bargain. Not on the free endpaper but on a front interior page was the name and two addresses in her script of the previous owner… Edwina.

Edwina Dumm was the wonderful creator of the classic boy-and-his-dog strip, Cap Stubbs and Tippie. Edwina was a good friend, delightful hostess to my children whenever we visited her; and in fact years earlier she had shown me that very book, and said how special it was to her. As Tippie advanced through the years, the strip eventually co-starred Jaspurr, a… cat! And Edwina researched when she could, where she could.



Finally, I can remember this next little event like it was yesterday. I was in high school (so, it was not yesterday!) and went to a book sale on the lawn of a Methodist church in Englewood NJ. Already I had a homing instinct for these things. By the way, this is not a mystery, but places I have lived, or lived near, if they are “toney” towns – Greenwich, Westport, Bryn Mawr, Evanston, La Jolla, Abington – you are more apt to find better books, first editions, autographs, notable former owners’ tags, and association copies.

Anyway, on that afternoon in Englewood an attractive, decorative spine caught my eye. Very Art Nouveau. Nice binding. Hey, the author – and illustrator! – was Rose O’Neill. I then knew of her only as creator of the cute Kewpie dolls. Of course, and as shown by this book, she also was a writer and illustrator (often steamy romances), a poet, a sculptor (often erotic subjects), and an active and successful entrepreneur. The revival of Nemo Magazine will have a major profile and portfolio of her work, followed, I hope, by a major book.

It is obvious that I was happy enough with this “find,” but on the free front endpaper was a (beautiful, typically elegant) inscription by Rose… to the “dear” McManuses. A note inside confirmed that it was to Mr and Mrs George McManus, despite her misspelling of the Bringing Up Father cartoonist’s name. Maybe that’s why it was priced at only a quarter.

It sounds like I might be as happy with bargains as the “associations.” Not so, but they don’t hurt. I associate with bargains too.



83—♠


Thursday, December 27, 2018

Friday, September 11, 2009

Edwina (1893-1990)


Edwina (1893-1990), was Edwina Dumm, author of the comic strip “Cap Stubbs and Tippie.” She was from Upper Sandusky, Ohio. She went to New York and studied under George Bridgeman while working as a freelance cartoonist. Harpo Marx saw one of Edwina’s dog cartoons in a magazine and showed it to Alexander Woollcott which led to Edwina illustrating Woollcott’s book “Two Gentlemen and a Lady.” Promotions for the “Cap Stubbsstrip began with advertisements on March 2 1918 and the strip began around March 18.

EDWINA IS ACE ARTIST!

Girl Creator of Gazette’s “Cap Stubbs” One of Few of Her Sex In Comic Art Job

Edwina, the petite young artist who draws “Cap Stubbs and Tippie,” a daily comic strip, that appears in the Gazette, is one of the few successful cartoonists of her sex.

When her identity is revealed to anyone who has studied her work, the usual comment is “Impossible. A girl couldn’t draw, convincingly, about boys and dogs.”

Born in Upper Sandusky, Ohio, Edwina listened to stories about the Indians who had settled there before the town was founded. So did her playmates, mostly little boys at that time. Undoubtedly, much of her present day understanding of how the small boys mind works is traceable to this period in her childhood.

Coming from a family of journalists, she obtained her first job as political cartoonist for a paper in Columbus, Ohio. For several years she was the only girl in the country to hold such a position. Then one morning the paper folded up and she was without a job.

Her drawing attracted the attention of George Matthew Adams, president of the syndicate that bears his name, and a contract soon started the artist on her way to fame.

When asked where she gleaned fresh ideas for her cartoons, Edwina replied: “When Lily Sinbad (her cherished mutt-poodle dog) fails to supply me with ideas, I resort to memory. Sometimes I take long bus rides, and walk through central Park with Lily, and think of the kids back home. Somehow the ideas seem to come.

For many years Edwina drew “Sinbad” for Life magazine. Two pictured books of his doings have been published, and one book of “Alex the Great.” She also finds time to turn out illustrations for books and magazines.

When not in new York City, she lives in a cream colored blue-shuttered Connecticut farmhouse. Lily Sinbad prefers life in the country, but Edwina likes the tempo of a big city. Lily has to do the sacrificing!

- From the Evening Gazette, Xenia, Ohio, 19 Jan 1937.

March 2, 1918

September 6, 1918

March 11, 1918

March 18, 1918



*Don Kurtz original autograph illustration.