John Held, Jr. (1889-1958) was born in Salt Lake City, Utah, was a cartoonist whose work epitomised the “jazz age” of the 1920s in the United States. At the age of 16 he was drawing sports and political cartoons for the Salt Lake Tribune, and at 19 he sold his first cartoon to a national magazine. Shortly afterward he moved to New York City, where he worked in the art department of a newspaper.
After service in the U.S. Navy during World War I, Held returned to New York City, where he gained fame and wealth for his drawings in the popular humour magazines Life, Judge, and College Humor. These drawings conveyed a spirit of the era comparable to that in the writings of F. Scott Fitzgerald. In particular, Held created such immortal characters as the short-skirted, short-haired “flapper,” who rolled her stockings and used a long cigarette holder, and her escort, who wore a raccoon coat, had patent-leather hair parted in the middle, smoked a pipe, and carried a hip flask. Held’s ability to point up the foibles of the time without sentimentality or bitterness made his cartoons notable. Also during the 1920s, he drew two comic strips: “Merely Margie, an Awfully Sweet Girl” and “Rah, Rah, Rosalie,” both of which ended with the Depression.
During the 1930s Held wrote novels and short stories and did sculpture and woodcuts. His woodcuts, often evoking the “Gay Nineties,” appeared in The New Yorker magazine. During World War II he served in the U.S. Army Signal Corps and was stationed in Belmar, N.J., where he made his home after the war. Held’s Angels (1952), illustrated by Held, with text by Frank Bunker Gilbreth Jr., was a word and picture evocation of the 1920s.
For more information on John Held Jr. see part 1, and for earlier works see parts 1 - 3 also.
This is part 4 of a 6-part series on the works of John Held Jr:
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1928 Her Beauty She Sold for an Old'Man's Gold wood engraving The New Yorker |
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1928 Horse Whipping the Masher and Good for Him wood engraving The New Yorker |
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1928 How to Behave—Though a Debutante Book cover and dust jacket (below) |
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1928 How to Behave—Though a Debutante Book cover and dust jacket |
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1928 Jesse James wood engraving |
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1928 Life magazine, March 1 "The Tattooed Man Goes Collegiate!" |
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1928 Life magazine, April 19 Burlesque Number |
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1928 Life magazine, June 3 Commencement Number "The Sweet Girl Graduate" |
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c1928 New England is Vacationland poster |
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c1928 The Rumrunner’s Sister-in-Law lino-cut 37.8 x 28 cm Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC |
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1929 Lobby Card "So This is College" |
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1930 Anna Held's Milk Bath woodcut |
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1930 Dream Girls of a Dim Decade wood engraving |
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1930 Film Swedish film poster for "The Girl Said No!" |
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1930 I'll Tell my Big Brother by Edward Dean Sullivan dust jacket, published by The Vanguard Press Inc., New York |
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1930 Making Love to You |
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1930 Saturday to Monday by Newman Levy and John Held Jr published by Alfred A Knopf |
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1930 Saxophone Player |
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1930 Soldering the Bustle wood engraving |
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1930 The Awakening |
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1930 The Dust Ruffle wood engraving |
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1930 The Open Placket wood engraving |
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1930 The Secret Pocket in the Pettiskirt wood engraving |
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1930 Until the James Runs Dry, Grim Youth book illustration pen and ink on board 30.5 x 21.6 cm |
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1930 Untitled (probably from the above book) |
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1930s The Garter |
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1930s The Drunkard's Wife wood engraving |
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1930s That romantic spot known as the "Back Room" Ah-me! wood engraving |
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1930s Northward - The New Haven R.R. Poster |
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1930s Forty Famous Cocktails wood engraving |
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c1930 Untitled (boy and girl on a couch) for the magazine College Humor black ink 21.8 x 38.5 cm Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, CA |
1930 The Outlines of Sport published by Duttons Inc., NY:
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1930 The Outlines of Sport, book illustration pen and ink on board 22.9 x 26.7 cm |
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1930 The Outlines of Sport, book illustration pen and ink on board 25.4 x 25.4 cm |
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1930 The Outlines of Sport, book illustration pen and ink on board 27.9 x 17.8 cm |
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1930 The Outlines of Sport, book illustration pen and ink on board |
1930-31 Merely Margie, comic strip:
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1930 Merely Margie comic strip pen and ink on board 50.8 x 55.2 cm (see below) |
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Detail |
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1930 Merely Margie comic strip pen and ink on board 55.2 x 50.8 cm (see below) |
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1930 Merely Margie comic strip pen and ink on board 55.2 x 51.4 cm (see below) |
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Detail |
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c1930-31 Merely Margie comic strip pen and ink on board 26.7 x 58.4 cm (see below) |
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Detail |
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Detail
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1931 But Madame It's the Latest |
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1931 Are you a Virgin? |
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1931 A Vision in Pink |
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1931 A Summer Breeze |
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1931 A Little Wrestling |
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1931 A Land Beulah |
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1931 A Bird in a Gilded Cage |
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1931 (Yeah) It's Cooler Here |
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