-40%
Clyde Forsythe Victory Liberty Loan - World War One | WWI c. 1917
$ 396
- Description
- Size Guide
Description
Clyde ForsytheVictory Liberty Loan -
And They Thought We Couldn't Fight!
in margin: "KETTERLINUS, PHILA." & "5-C"
The Liberty Bond was sold in the United States to support the Allied cause in WWI, and was promoted in an aggressive advertising campaign with original art posters by by name artists. Subscribing to the bonds became a symbol of patriotic duty in the United States and introduced the idea of financial securities to many citizens for the first time.
poster measures approximately: 30 5/8" W x 41" H
linen backer
measures approximately: 33 5/8" W x 43 7/8" H
About
Clyde Forsythe
(1885-1962)
Forsythe was a nationally famous comic strip artist who abandoned his career to paint California desert landscapes.
Forsythe was born in Orange, California and grew up in the deserts of the Coachella Valley and Los Angeles Basin. His parents had owned a store in Tombstone, Arizona next door to the OK Corral, and Forsythe had grown up with the stories of that rough, desert mining town.
Having shown artistic promise as a boy, Forsythe studied at the Los Angeles School of Art and Design. In 1904, he took the train to New York to study at the Art Students League under Frank DuMond. He worked as a staff artist for Joseph Pulitzer's New York World while attending classes, and later switched to W.R. Hearst's New York Journal. He went on to work for a succession of Hearst papers, drawing briefly for the St. Louis Post Dispatch, and then the Los Angeles Examiner, before returning to New York in the nineteen-teens to work at the American.
Living in New Rochelle, New York, Forsythe met a young artist named Norman Rockwell, and the two shared a studio that had once been owned by Frederick Remington. Forsythe introduced the younger artist to the staff of Saturday Evening Post and Rockwell sold them his first cover in 1916. Forsythe also became close friends with Frank Tenney Johnson, a fellow illustrator and lover of the West who painted for Field & Stream.
While at the New York American, Forsythe began to develop comic strips. Among his earliest were a gag strip about boxing called The Great White Dope, and a western series, Tenderfoot Tim. In 1918, he began his most successful strip, Joe's Car about an automobile-obsessed young man. In 1928, he renamed the strip Joe Jinks, as its protagonist had gone on to fly airplanes and then became a professional boxing manager. Forsythe quit Joe Jinks in 1933 and began a cowboy strip titled Way Out West. He then added a home life strip, The Little Woman. Neither of these was very successful, and he returned to drawing Joe Jinks in 1937, but quit cartooning for good the next year.
In 1920, Forsythe and his wife, Cotta, had given up New York and returned to southern California. Frank Johnson and his wife followed shortly, and the two artists built a studio in Alhambra which they shared until Johnson's death in 1939. The studio became a gathering place for their artist friends including Maynard Dixon, Charlie Russell, Ed Borein, Nicolai Fechin, Dean Cornwell, and Jimmy Swinnterton who was a comic strip pioneer also working for Hearst newspapers. In 1923, Forsythe and Johnson founded the Biltmore Gallery at the Biltmore Hotel in Los Angeles to sell their work and that of their friends.
Forsythe painted desert landscapes from the time he settled in California and, after giving up comics in 1938, devoted himself to easel painting full time. He was fascinated with mining history, sometimes living in ghost towns on extended painting trips. He relished sitting at prospectors' camp fires, listening to their stories. He was proud to be one of the early desert painters, observing that he and his friends helped make people aware of the desert as a place of great beauty.