No heavy lifting/posting for me this week, although I did want to offer up something celebratory for the Fourth, so I went through some of my digital files and favorite pictorial resources (MagazineArt.org and the Magazine Rack at the Internet Archive) to come up with a portfolio of July covers from the “Golden Age” of American illustration. It’s interesting to me how different types of magazines use patriotic themes and tropes to fashion images for their particular audiences: just the colors and perhaps a few artfully-placed stars and stripes can be evocative of the holiday without adding Uncle Sam and George Washington. For the most part, I’ve avoided the very literal in favor of the suggestive, although I can’t resist some of the “playing with fire” images which are pretty striking before World War One: the Comfort lady below looks quite uncomfortable, and like she is quite literally blowing off her hand with firecrackers, but the Puck lady seems quite happy to be ablaze. Some of the most illustrative Fourth of July images from this era can be found in children’s magazines (Harper’s Round Table and John Martin’s Book), but women’s and shelter magazines also signaled the holiday in style.
July magazine covers 1896-1937: from the Digital Commonwealth (Harper’s Round Table), the Library of Congress (Lippincott’s and Puck), CuriousBookShop@Etsy (House Beautiful , 1933) and the great site MagazineArt.org.
July 3rd, 2019 at 8:03 am
Have a great New England July 4th! Down here in Washington DC, well… hopefully the tanks won’t sink into the Mall, and if we’re lucky, there will be a single thunderstorm centered over the Lincoln Memorial.
July 3rd, 2019 at 8:49 am
OMG the image of those tanks!!! Horrifying–I guess he is emulating North Korea or the Stalinist Soviet Union.
July 3rd, 2019 at 12:12 pm
Delightful to see the quality of illustration.
July 3rd, 2019 at 7:36 pm
The art deco images are beautiful and wonderfully curated. Yes, the children’s covers say it all! Thank you for sharing your interests and research with your followers.
Happy 4th!
July 3rd, 2019 at 9:47 pm
To you as well, Piper!