In GAG  's collection
Troubles by Peter Arno - Original Illustration
1433 

Troubles

Original Illustration
Ink wash
18.6 x 24.5 cm (7.32 x 9.65 in.)
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Description

"Don't tell me your troubles. I've got troubles on my own"

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About Peter Arno

New Yorker cartoonist Peter Arno may not have invented the single-speaker captioned cartoon, but he surely perfected it. He was born Curtis Arnoux Peters, Jr. on 8 January 1904 in New York City. He was about to abandon his ambition to be an artist for a musical career when he received a check for a drawing that he submitted to a new humor magazine, The New Yorker, that had debuted February 21, 1925. With the publication of this spot illustration on June 20, 1925, Arno began a 43-year association with Harold Ross's weekly, until his death. Arno's many iconic covers and cartoons helped build The New Yorker's reputation of sophisticated humor and high quality artwork. A pun from one of his 1941 cartoons has remained a popular catchphrase: "Well, back to the old drawing board." Until at least 1962, he was also working for Circus Magazine by Barnum & Bailey. Text (c) Lambiek

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