Showing posts with label Illustration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Illustration. Show all posts

Saturday, July 26, 2025

Graphic Grandeur (Dangerous When Wet Edition)

 



Fifty summers ago, this Roger Kastel-illustrated poster made its debut on the exteriors, and in the lobbies, of movie theatres across the nation and around the world, promising filmgoers a terrifying cinematic experience. However, movie posters often promise things that the actual movies then fail to deliver. Did Jaws live up to its poster's promise? Well, if you were a filmgoer fifty summers ago--and most people didn't bother with movies during the summer until this one completely changed the business model--you already know the answer to that question, but play along with me anyway as we watch the trailer: 




Trailers also sometimes promise more than the actual movie delivers, even as it's a slicing and dicing of the actual movie. Trust me, though, Jaws delivered (with a lot of slicing and dicing of a different sort.) Personally, I've always found the film more exciting than out-and-out scary, but that's fine with me. Whatever gets the heart thumping. Based on a then-recent bestselling book by Peter Benchley (Robert's grandson) and only the second feature film by the then-still-in-his-20s Steven Spielberg, it quickly became the all-time box-office champ and remained so for the next two years until topped by another summer blockbuster Star Wars (which in turn was topped a few years later by Spielberg's E.T., the Extraterrestrial which made its debut during--you guessed it--the summer.) One thing that had no chance of topping it--at least not in the commercial sense--was some magazine parody, but that doesn't means my then-middle-school-age-self couldn't get a giggle out of this:



Looks like unsafe swimming conditions all around.

Illustration by Mort Kunstler
 


Saturday, June 21, 2025

Graphic Grandeur (To Thy Own Self Beguile Edition)

 



Caricaturist Al Hirschfeld was born on this day in 1903 (he died about five months short of 100 in 2003.) He caricatured a lot of famous people in his lifetime, including...



...himself.

He actually looks a bit more approachable in the photograph, but then he liked to exaggerate.


Friday, September 27, 2024

Graphic Grandeur (Hub Bub Edition)

 



Ah, yes, who doesn't like going off to distant lands and viewing all those famous landmarks up close? However, as you do so, Norman Rockwell wants you to give some thought to those working stiffs who make such travel possible:



In 1937 anyway. By now it's all been digitalized. 

Sunday, July 28, 2024

Graphic Grandeur (Babarians at the Gate Edition)

 


There's been a lot in the news these past few days about a certain Vice-Presidential candidate's charge that the Democratic Party is controlled by a bunch of childless cat ladies. Well, if you ask me, Republicans have a much bigger problem on their hands.




For instance, take this childless woman. No cats to be seen. Instead, she hangs out with...



...elephants. Try explaining that, JD!


Illustrations by Jean de Brunhoff.

Wednesday, July 3, 2024

Graphic Grandeur (Firecrackup Edition)

 


Don't know exactly what illustrator J.C. Leyendecker had in mind when he came up with this cover one hundred years ago, but it sums up my fears for our nation in July of 2024: napping away, completely unaware that your ass is about to get blown off.

Friday, May 12, 2023

Graphic Grandeur (Fabricated Fabrications Edition)

 

1935-2023



It would be a mistake to call illustrator Bruce McCall, who died this past Friday, a Luddite simply because he spent so much of his time and his talent poking fun at science and technology and what the future holds for both. For one thing, the science and technology he usually made light of wasn't the Apple/Google/Microsoft digitalized artificial intelligence variety that naysayers warn will very soon suck all of humanity into some sort of "singularity". In fact, McCall seemed less interested in the future we're told to expect and more interested in the future we were told to expect, but expect no more, taking as his satirical inspiration everything from the 1939 New York's World Fair to 1950s sci-fi drive-in movies to the gloriously illustrated automobile advertising that dominated glossy magazines in the middle decades of the 20th century until some Madison Avenue genius figured out it was just as easy, maybe even easier, to photograph a car as to draw one. But why make fun of a past vision of the future that never panned out? Perhaps it was McCall's way of reminding us that out present vision of the future, for better or worse, may be as equally pan-resistance. For now, just sit back and enjoy this collection of art, mostly from The New Yorker, but with a few examples from the National Lampoon as well, and observe how deftly McCall brings past, present, and future together, only to pull them all apart again. No singularity has ever been more pluralistic:





















































































 

Ah, but a man's reach should exceed his grasp, or what's a heaven for?

--Robert Browning

Monday, September 5, 2022

Graphic Grandeur (Sabbatical Supplement Edition)

 


Illustrator J.C. Leyendecker (1874-1951) adds a touch of the spiritual to the workers' holiday, but what's going on exactly?

Perhaps that angel answered a May Day call.