Tag Archives: Artists

Advertising Art: Cigar Store Indians, Pub Signs, Circus Wagons

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From Times Square to the Las Vegas strip, outdoor advertising rules. So it is not a big leap of faith to see how advertising influenced American folk art. Today’s digital billboards were once zinc castings and pine carvings were the mobile ads of yore.

While they once announced businesses, they now make awesome additions to contemporary homes and spare lofts. And the best news is that you don’t have to go picking cross country to fine examples that stir your inner Don Draper because the best are waiting for you at Americana Week.

Ultimately, the story of advertising art in America is the story of America’s carvers, before the invention of chainsaw art, of course. Early carvers could turn white pine into animated figures, caricatures, even puns.

BACKGROUND:

By the 1800′s, carvers had been elevated to the status of artists although they thought of themselves as tradesmen. Wood, rather than marble, was their medium. Their works were marketed through catalogs and sold across the country.

The craft has roots in marine carvings. Figureheads had long been seen as devices to ward off dangers at sea. The  Vikings favored dragons. The British thrust the lion rampant up front. American ships often sailed behind the Federal eagle “displayed.”  Then, as America came of age, historic figures like Pocahontas, George Washington and Andrew Jackson bean showing up on  prows.

Vanity and power being what they are, commercial ships often had portrait figureheads of the owner’s wife, daughters or sweetheart. It was as much an honor to be immortalized in wood as it is today to be immortalized on the cover of People magazine.

One of the most famous figureheads is  “Minnehaha”  by Boston carver William B. Gleason. It was launched on a clipper ship in 1856 and looked like the famous English actress Julia Bennett Barrows.

As wind power bowed to steam and ships were redesigned, the elimination of a prow rendered the figurehead obsolete. This decline in commissions forced carvers to seek work in the world of advertising.

Cigar Store Indians were the first of the iconic American images, although their origin dates back to England, circa 1617, when small wooden figures – often black men wearing headdresses and kilts made of tobacco leaves – were called “Virginie Men” and placed on counter tops to promote smoking.

As their popularity grew, the figures varied from realistic portrayals of historical figures to idealized braves and squaws. Look closely at the genre and you’ll see garden-variety racism carved right in to the designs.

Some name artists used Native Americans as models, creating specialties within the genre.

  • Thomas V. Brooks, for instance, made “leaners,” Indians resting their elbows on log posts, barrels or gigantic cigars.
  • John Cromwell was known for his V-shaped headdresses.
  • The French-Canadian carver Louis Jobin often placed the left arm at chest level holding a robe while the right clutched a bundle of cigars.
  • New York’s Samuel Robb crafted maidens holding bouquets of roses similar to one had made for his wife’s tombstone.
Tobacco Store figure Arab

Exotic figures showed global influences

Other  retailers relied on all sorts of ethnic figures to advertise their specialties. Tearooms featured idealized figures of Chinese men and women. Women’s clothiers put out well-attired “period girls” to attract affluent buyers.

The businessman at the helm offering figures was a German named William Demuth of Williamsburg, Brooklyn. He liked wood until discovering the advantages of zinc and by 1875 the Demuth catalog advertised 30 different zinc figures, twice the number of wooden ones.

Trade Signs

Trade signs were no less dramatic than figures. In fact, some were so cleverly crafted with exaggerated images and out-of-scale numerals that the art overshadowed the message.

Overall, up until the American Revolution, tavern signs (like the one shown above)  played off well-known English images, like the lion. In the sign featured here, William Rice, a Connecticut carver,  paired a Federal eagle with a chained lion as a nod to American independence.

Eye Glasses

Some images never change

The business of trade signs was so lucrative that even well known artists like Edward Hicks worked them. Best known for serene farmscapes and depictions of the peaceable kingdom, Hicks began as an apprentice in the coach making business. There, he lettered and adorned a wide variety of goods, from furniture to fire buckets to signboards.

Carousel and Circus Figures

When the demand for show figures peaked circa 1840 to 1890 carvers looked far a field once again for their livelihood. This time they found carousel makers and traveling circuses ripe for their talents.

Animals that rode the outside ring of the carousel had the greatest visibility, so carvers lavished them with the finest effort.  Circus wagons usually had artwork that portrayed many different aspects of civilization, such as an animal cage decorated with rather high-brow musical themes

Weather Vanes and Whirligigs

 Weather vanes, though not often used as trade signs, have a special place in American art. The earliest date to the middle of the Seventeenth Century, and are descendants of the banner or pennant vanes that originated in Europe and England over 500 years ago.

Flat, homemade vanes and those created by local blacksmiths depict everything from barnyard animals to variations on the Indian hunter. The earliest ones are made of painted wood, sheet metal or a combination of both.

By 1850, vanes were mass produced. Made of thin sheets of copper that were hammered into cast iron molds and then soldered together, they are quite prized.

Locomotive weather vane

Locomotive weather vane

Whirligigs are most whimsical of the genre. Whatever their form – soldier, policemen, ducks – whirligigs serve no purpose other than to delight the eye.

Today, as avatars  increasingly invade our screens, advertising art of the past is a joy, a delight, an art form to be treasure

Adapted from a 2009 article by Regina Kolbe. All images courtesy of Colonial Williamsburg

 

 

The Resident Artists of Green-Wood Cemetery

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A visit to the booth of any number of American Paintings dealers and you will see many names of New Yorkers signed on canvas. Many of those artists are still at home in New York, specifically in Brooklyn’s Green-Wood Cemetery. A visit provides a tour of who’s who in granite from Currier and Ives to William Merrit Chase, George Bellows and Jean Michel Basquiat.

William Merritt Chase was certainly a big name during his lifetime and still one of the most well-known American artists. The engraving on his tombstone has almost worn off over time. Chase

once furnished his 10th street studio with luxurious and exotic items. He was one of the first generation of “modern artists” who took advantage of media and critics to create and protect his image as an artist. For sure, the studio visit is a powerful tool to connect to old and new clienteles and show off his tastes. Thus the meager size and simplistic style of the tombstone seems so incongruent to his social status.

Eastman Johnson was out of fashion during his late years. His drawing of a Jewish boy was sold by his widow to John Beatty, then the director of Carnegie Institute, for five dollars. It was one of the few portrait drawings that I would never forget. No other artist better portrayed antebellum and post-civil war America than Eastman Johnson. The tombstones says it clearly: “His works are his monument.”

It was not surprising to see the family tombs of both Nathaniel Currier and James Ives are well maintained and fairly grand. A business can run through generations successfully, but artistic talent may not transcend to the next generation, albeit all the best wish and family environment. One exception is perhaps Lucy Durand Woodman, the daughter of Asher B. Durand. She must be proud to be not only the daughter of Asher Durand but also an artist herself. Buried not far away from her father, her tombstone is in a shape of a artist pallet with three brushes. Thanks to internet, Geo and I found an image of her painting online, although more often her name appears in different museums as a donor of Asher Durand’s works.

There are not many examples of successful artists families (Pearle, Wyeth, and maybe Hill came to my mind), but both William and James Hart enjoyed a successful career with similar subjects and styles. The brothers were buried not together, but within close proximity. James’ tombstone is unique in that a cow is portrayed in the bronze relief. Quite often, Jame’s cow groups are grazing near the brooks or river banks, forming a horizontal or diagonal band. But here, the only cow is resting and staring earnestly toward the visitor. An angel stretched her arm over the cow and a quote from the bible says: “He makes me lie down on the pastures.”

Green-Wood Cemetery has about nine burial and/or cremations every day. Its vast expanse makes searching burial very challenging. Sometimes an old road or path is eliminated and instead a row of tomestones replaces it. In the case of George Bellows, we didn’t find his tombstone because the small trail which can be used to anchor his tomb is gone. Only after we came back and searched on internet did we find out his tombstone only specifies his initials: G W B.

The biggest surprise came from the mausoleum of John LaFarge. Louis Comfort Tiffany built an empire of stained glass, but LaFarge, equally famous for his glass-making, rests in a much grander scale at the base of a hillside. There, a red flower was placed on the door, a striking contrast between red and black. The intricate spiderwebs indicate perhaps it has been there long time. The door has no windows to see through. I am wondering what it would look like inside?

Check the Green-Wood Cemetery web site for tour and visiting information.