THE EXHIBITION
[1]
- Summers, William H., 1897-
-
[Untitled]
The Cleveland News [1940]
Crayon and whiting over blue pencil on board
494 x 376 mm.
[2]
- Bliss
-
[Untitled]
Publisher's Syndicate, 1939
Ink and crayon on board
268 x 226 mm.
Inscribed: "To Secretary Hopkins with best wishes Edwin Cox"
[3]
- Hutton, Hugh M., 1897-1976
-
"O - Woe Is me!"
Philadelphia Inquirer [1938?]
Crayon on board
417 x 308 mm.
[4]
- Ray, Silvey Jackson ("S. J."), 1891-1970
-
"What Started Out to Be a First Class Political Asset."
Kansas City Star, April 28, 1936
Ink on board
352 x 310 mm.
[5]
- Talburt, Harold M. ("Bill"), 1895-1966
-
"Righteous Indignation!"
Washington Daily News [n.d.]
Crayon and whiting on board
330 x 284 mm.
Talburt won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1933.
[6]
- Lewis, Ross A., 1902-
-
"Prophet of Gloom"
The Milwaukee Journal [n.d.]
Crayon, whiting, and ink on board
290 x 230 mm.
Lewis won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1935.
[7]
- Evans, Raymond Oscar, 1887-1954
-
"Oliver Twist - Modern Version"
Columbus Dispatch, May 22, 1936
Ink on board
432 x 432 mm.
[8]
- Evans, Raymond Oscar, 1887-1954
-
"Good Neighbors"
Columbus Evening Dispatch, August 6, 1936
Ink on board
460 x 454 mm.
Inscribed: "to Mr. Harry Hopkins - compliments of Ray Evans Aug 19,
1936"
[9]
- Brown, Edward S. ("Ted"), 1876-1942
-
"Check and Double Check"
New York Herald Tribune, August 12, 1938
Ink on board
340 x 270 mm.
[10]
- Elderman, Gene
-
"I Look to See the Relief Curve Go Down at an Early Date."
The Washington Post, October 25, 1938
Crayon on board
330 x 288 mm.
Inscribed: "To: Harry Hopkins, with sincere good wishes Gene Elderman"
[11]
- Ray, Silvey Jackson ("S. J."), 1891-1970
-
"Two-Role Harry"
Kansas City Star, May 19, 1938
Ink on board
355 x 310 mm.
[12]
- Sykes, Charles Henry, 1882-1942
-
"Home Again"
Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger, 1939
Ink and crayon on board
384 x 314 mm.
Inscribed: "To Harry L. Hopkins with the compliments of The Evening
Public Ledger & C. H. Sykes - May 15 '39."
[13]
- Pease, Lucius Curtis ("Lute"), 1869-1963
-
"Wha= What?"
Newark Evening News [n.d.]
Ink, crayon, and whiting over blue pencil on board
312 x 410 mm.
Pease won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1949.
[14]
- Duffy, Edmund, 1899-1962
-
"Another Noble Experiement [sic]"
Baltimore Evening Sun [1939?]
Ink and crayon on board
470 x 340 mm.
Duffy won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1931, 1934,
and 1940.
[15]
- Goldberg, Reuben Lucius ("Rube"), 1883-1970
-
"Get Out the Crowbar of Economy"
New York Evening Sun [1939?]
Ink and crayon on board
330 x 280 mm.
Inscribed [by Goldberg]: "with personal greetings to Harry L. Hopkins"
Goldberg won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1948.
[16]
- Shoemaker, Vaughn, 1902-
-
"Well, Well, Now We Should Get Some Place"
Chicago Daily News [n.d.]
Ink, crayon, and whiting on board
440 x 366 mm.
Shoemaker won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1938 and
1947.
[17]
- Darling, Jay Norwood ("Ding"), 1876-1962
-
"All the Privacy of a Goldfish."
[n.p.] 1940
Ink on board
418 x 321 mm.
Darling won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1924 and
1943.
[18]
- Sykes, Charles Henry, 1882-1942
-
"Small Potatoes"
Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger, 1940
Ink and crayon on board
384 x 318 mm.
Inscribed: "To Messrs. Wright, Hopkins et al. with the best wishes
of C. H. Sykes & the Evening Public Ledger. Phila., Apr. 19, 1940."
[19]
- Parrish, Joseph, 1905-
-
"Having Themselves Paged"
Chicago Tribune, 1939
Ink on board
308 x 280 mm.
[20]
- Berryman, Clifford Kennedy, 1869-1949
-
[Untitled]
Washington Star [1940]
Ink on board
310 x 356 mm.
Berryman won the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning in 1944.
[21]
- Brown, Edward S. ("Ted"), 1876-1942
-
"One Trial Balloon That Got Results"
New York Herald Tribune [1940?]
Ink on board
342 x 268 mm.
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