Boardman Robinson: Difference between revisions
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'''Boardman Robinson''' (1876–1952) was a [[Canadian]]-[[United States|American]] [[artist]], [[illustrator]] and [[cartoonist]]. |
'''Boardman Robinson''' (1876–1952) was a [[Canadians|Canadian]]-[[United States|American]] [[artist]], [[illustrator]] and [[cartoonist]]. |
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==Biography== |
==Biography== |
Revision as of 22:46, 12 March 2017
Boardman Robinson | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | September 5, 1952 | (aged 75)
Nationality | Canadian-American |
Occupation(s) | Artist, illustrator and cartoonist |
Boardman Robinson (1876–1952) was a Canadian-American artist, illustrator and cartoonist.
Biography
Early years
Boardman Robinson was born September 6, 1876 in Nova Scotia, Canada. He spent his childhood in England and Canada, before moving to Boston in the first half of the 1890s.[1] Robinson worked his way through normal school, following a program to learn mechanical drafting.[1]
Robinson first studied art at the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston. He would later go on to study at the Académie Colarossi and the École des Beaux-Arts, both in Paris, where he was influenced by the political cartooning of Honoré Daumier, as well as Forain and Steinlen.[1]
In 1903, Robinson married Sarah Senter Whitney. The couple moved to Paris where Robinson briefly worked as art editor for Vogue, before returning to the United States in 1904.[1]
Career
Upon returning to the United States, Robinson worked as an illustrator, drawing cartoons and theater illustrations for the New York Morning Telegraph.[1] He freelanced for a wide range of other popular publications, including Pearson's Magazine, Scribner's Magazine, Collier's, Harper's Weekly, and others.[1]
In 1910, Robinson took a job on the staff of the New York Tribune drawing editorial cartoons, a position which he retained for four years. With the eruption of World War I in 1914, Robinson's increasingly radical anti-militarist political views brought him into conflict with his employer and he quit the publication.[1]
In 1915, Robinson travelled to Eastern Europe on behalf of Metropolitan Magazine along with journalist John Reed.[1] The pair saw first hand the effects of the European war in Russia, Serbia, Macedonia and Greece. In 1916 Reed's account of the journey was collected in a book called The War in Eastern Europe, to which Robinson contributed illustrations.[1]
On his return from Europe, Robinson worked at the socialist monthly The Masses. His highly political cartoons as well as the general anti-war stance of The Masses was deemed to have violated the recently passed Espionage Act of 1917, and The Masses had to cease publication. Robinson, along with the other defendants were acquitted on October 5, 1918. Following The Masses, Robinson became a contributing editor to The Liberator and The New Masses, working with former Masses editor Max Eastman.
Robinson would later go on to teach art at the Art Students League in New York City (1919–30) and head the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center (1936–47). Some of his students include Bill Tytla, Edmund Duffy, Jacob Burck, Russel Wright, Eric Bransby, Rifka Angel, Mary Anne Bransby, Gerhard Bakker, and Esther Shemitz (who married Whittaker Chambers): both Burck and Shemitz contributed illustrations to The New Masses as did their mentor.)
Robinson is also known as a muralist. Some of his mural commissions include Rockefeller Center, the Department of Justice Building in Washington, D.C. and a nine-panel mural on the History of Trade for Kaufmann's flagship department store in Pittsburgh completed in 1929.
Robinson also illustrated several books, among these are editions of Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass (1921), Dostoyevsky's The Brothers Karamazov (1933), Edgar Lee Masters' Spoon River Anthology (1941), and Herman Melville's Moby Dick (1942).
Death and legacy
Boardman Robinson died on September 5, 1952.
Footnotes
Gallery
-
Cover illustration for The Masses, October 1916
-
Left behind in Serbia, 1918
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Save the Serbians from cholera, 1918
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Europe 1916, October 1916
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The Father and Mother, circa 1915
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I Believe in the Sword and Almighty God, 1914
Further reading
- Albert Christ-Janer, Boardman Robinson. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1946.
External links
- Student Resource on Boardman Robinson
- Boardman Robinson Internet Archive, at Marxists Internet Archive. Retrieved October 19, 2009.
- 1876 births
- 1952 deaths
- Canadian emigrants to the United States
- 20th-century American painters
- American male painters
- American cartoonists
- American illustrators
- American muralists
- American socialists
- Art Students League of New York faculty
- Massachusetts College of Art and Design alumni
- Académie Colarossi alumni
- American alumni of the École des Beaux-Arts
- Persons acquitted under the Espionage Act of 1917
- Artists of the American West
- Artists from Nova Scotia
- New York Tribune personnel
- People of the New Deal arts projects
- Artists from Boston
- Painters from Massachusetts