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Martin Schneider writes:
Check this out—I am really excited about an exhibition that starts at the J.P. Morgan Library in New York this Friday. It's called "On the Money: Cartoons for The New Yorker" and it runs from January 23 through May 24. In the wake of the disastrous financial news of the last few months, someone had the brilliant idea of using New Yorker cartoons to illustrate attitudes about finance over the last several decades:
Celebrating the art of the cartoonist, "On the Money: Cartoons for The New Yorker" features approximately eighty original drawings by some of The New Yorker's most talented and beloved artists who have tackled the theme of money and the many ways in which it defines us. Included in the show are drawings by such luminaries as Charles Barsotti, George Booth, Dana Fradon, Lee Lorenz, William Hamilton, and J. B. Handelsman. The exhibition is on view only at the Morgan.
The works are drawn entirely from the collection of Melvin R. Seiden, a longtime supporter of the Morgan, who has assembled one of the largest and most representative private selections of this art form which spans the history of The New Yorker. The Seiden collection of New Yorker cartoons, numbering nearly 1,500 sheets, complements the Morgan's holdings in the history of satire and humor, which range from the Renaissance to the twentieth century. Following the great cartoonists of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries—including James Gillray, H.K. Browne a.k.a. Phiz, and Honoré Daumier, in whose works the Morgan's collection is particularly rich—the artists represented in this exhibition continue the thread of chronicling contemporary attitudes....
The drawings in "On the Money" include a selection of works from the magazine's early years as well as contributions from cartoonists working during the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, when financial issues were among the dominant themes of many cartoons. Subjects such as politics, sex, inheritance, and real estate demonstrate the impact of money on individual lives, while the shared experience of recessions and booms provides inspiration for broader treatments of the theme. Finding humor in money and the economy has been a mainstay of New Yorker artists, and the cartoons continue to engage viewers.
The artistry of the works reveals the eloquent and efficient draftsmanship essential to a successful cartoon as well as the artists' process of creating and revising an incisive, humorous vignette. The exhibition also delineates the critical role of the cartoon editor, whose work is essential to the reader's enjoyment. A selection of cartoons that were improved by editorial recommendations is accompanied by equally amusing correspondence between editor and artist about achieving the perfect union between word and image. Also featured in the exhibition are photographic portraits by Anne Hall of many of the artists behind the cartoons.
The sample picture on the exhibition page (note the handwritten caption) is mouth-watering. I am so going to this!