Title: |
Cartoon -- May We All Live to See It. |
Creator: |
Dart, Harry Grant, (1869 – 1938) |
Date: |
1912-10-24 |
Subject: |
Periodicals -- Illustrations. Caricatures and cartoons. American wit and humor, Pictorial. |
Description: |
Life magazine covers were on a variety of topics. Each issue had a theme that was introduced by the cover and reflected throughout the issue. The theme of this issue was the Bull Moose Party. Harry Grant Dart was born in Williamsport, Pennsylvania in 1869. His worked for a time creating crayon portraits for the National Crayon Company brochures. He drew for the Boston Herald and the New York World. The World sent Dart to Cuba as a sketch artist for important events. Eventually, he became the art editor of the World. Around the same time, he started his cartoon strip, the Explorigator. The strip only ran for 14 weeks in 1908. Dart went on to become a very prolific cartoonist for Life and Judge during the 1920s. He is best known for his futuristic and aviation-oriented cartoons and comic strips. His detailed cartoons featured complicated perspectives and futuristic speculations. He died in New Hampshire in 1938. Full page cartoon with several of Dart's predictions for the future. It is interesting to see that he envisioned a "Wireless Press" as early as 1912. |
Identifier: |
Volume 60, number 1565, page 2047. |
Bibliographic Citation: |
Scholars wishing to cite this item should include item title, volume and issue, Life, New York, N.Y: Life, date, Jen Library Archives and Special Collections periodical collection, the Savannah College of Art and Design, and the item's url. |
Source: | |
Type: |
Image |
Format: |
Illustration |
Extent: |
9 1/2 x 11 inches |
Medium: |
Print on paper |
Rights: |
Copyright is retained by the authors or artists of items in this collection, or their descendants, as stipulated by United States copyright law. |