
Edward Winsor Kemble's drawings began appearing in
Life almost from its inception in 1883 and his association with the magazine continued into the 1920s. His drawings caught the attention of Mark Twain and brought him the work for which he is probably best known today,
illustrating The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, the first of several collaborations between the two.
It's easy to guess at what Twain might have found so appealing in Kemble's drawings. His characters were alive, animated and full of expression. He made funny drawings, which was not often the case in
Life's cartoons or 19th century cartoons generally. He was one of a very few of
Life's contributors (F.P.W. "Chip" Bellew was another) to use sequential panels, often laid out across a couple of pages. (The examples here have been re-arranged in a more conventional comic strip format for easier readability. You're welcome.)
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May 17, 1883 |
Kemble used a variety of ethnic types in his cartoons, which was not uncommon in the WASPy pages of
Life or in other forms of 19th and early 20th century entertainment. His most popular work in his time, for
Life and other magazines such as
Century and
Colliers, were his cartoons of contemporary Negro life.
The World Encyclopedia of Cartoons described these drawings as "often sympathetic" which may seem, looking at some of the few examples here, an elastic use of the word. It goes on to say that "[w]hile his treatments were usually comic, Kemble took care to study the real urban and rural environments and living conditions of blacks. His caricatures were never absurdly exaggerated, although every convention - wild dress, chicken stealing, etc. - was thematically exploited to the fullest."
Possibly because these drawings were so popular, Kemble may have felt a commercial need to use black characters in situations that make the choice seem
arbitrary (.pdf file). In these drawings - and I haven't found a lot of them - he seems to have stumbled into some kind of cartooning ideal where ethnicity doesn't imply or symbolize anything except humanity. If Kemble did this consciously, which doesn't seem all that likely, he would have been way ahead of his time, and ours.
April 5, 1894
May 17, 1893
May 31, 1883
March 1, 1894
March 8, 1894
January 11, 1894
January 25, 1894
April 2, 1896
January 2, 1896
April 12, 1894
May 17, 1894
June 11, 1896
June 4, 1896
May 24, 1894
May 31, 1894UPDATE (10/15/06): All of Kemble's
Huck Finn illustrations can be viewed
here. Don't miss the
obscenely defaced sales prospectus illustration and the revelation of its existence by
The New York World. Thanks to Tom Mazzocco for the links.