Archive for the ‘Dandys in Advertising’ Category

Eustace Tilley

   Posted by: Archibald

Eustace TillyEustace Tilly is the name of the mascot, and a character created for The New Yorker magazine by Corey Ford. The magazine’s first cover illustration, of a dandy peering at a butterfly through a monocle, was drawn by Rea Irvin, the magazine’s first art editor.

Eustace Tilley was the hero of a series entitled “The Making of a Magazine,” which began on the inside front cover of the August 8 issue that first summer. He was a younger man than the figure of the original cover. His top hat was of a newer style, without the curved brim. He wore a morning coat and striped trousers. Ford borrowed Eustace Tilley’s last name from an aunt—he had always found it vaguely humorous.

Tilley was always busy, and in illustrations by Johann Bull, always poised. He might be in Mexico, supervising the vast farms that grew the cactus for binding the magazine’s pages together. The Punctuation Farm, where commas were grown in profusion, because Ross had developed a love of them, was naturally in a more fertile region. Tilley might be inspecting the Initial Department, where letters were sent to be capitalized. Or he might be superintending the Emphasis Department, where letters were placed in a vise and forced sideways, for the creation of italics. He would jump to the Sargasso Sea, where by insulting squids he got ink for the printing presses, which were powered by a horse turning a pole. It was told how in the great paper shortage of 1882 he had saved the magazine by getting society matrons to contribute their finery. Thereafter dresses were made at a special factory and girls employed to wear them out, after which the cloth was used for manufacturing paper. Raoul Fleischmann, who had moved into the offices to protect his venture with Ross, gathered the Tilley series into a promotion booklet. Later, Ross took a listing for Eustace Tilley in the Manhattan telephone directory.

VN:F [1.9.0_1079]
Foppishness
Dandiness
Coxcombry
Rating: 8.8/10 (5 votes cast)

Andy Warhol

   Posted by: Archibald

Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol

Andy Warhol began as a commercial illustrator in New York, doing artwork for ads and magazines in the 1940s and 1950s. Eventually he crossed from commercial work to fine art, blurring the line between the two along the way. In the early 1960s his huge and colorful silk-screen renderings of banal objects like Coke bottles and a Campbell’s Soup can were hugely popular and established him as the leader of the so-called Pop Art movement. (His multi-color, multi-image portrait of Marilyn Monroe is another famous image from this era.)

By the mid-1960s Warhol had become an icon of the psychedelic generation; he made strange and lengthy experimental movies, held famous gatherings in “The Factory,” his Manhattan studio, and surrounded himself with a court of fellow artists and adoring fans. He also worked closely with the experimental rock group The Velvet Underground and (in 1969) founded the influential celebrity magazine Interview.

Warhol’s attitude was summed up in part in his statement, “In the future everyone will be world-famous for fifteen minutes.”

Rate this Dandy:

VN:F [1.9.0_1079]
Foppishness
Dandiness
Coxcombry
Rating: 8.0/10 (7 votes cast)

Mr. Peanut

   Posted by: Archibald

150px-Mrpeanut

Mr. Peanut

Mr. Peanut is the advertising logo and mascot of Planters peanuts.

He consists of a drawing of an anthropomorphic peanut in its shell dressed in the formal clothing of an old-fashioned gentleman: a top hat, monocle, white gloves, spats, and a cane.

Since his conception, Mr. Peanut has appeared in many TV commercials as an animated cartoon character.

More recent commercials have shown him computer animated in a real-world setting.

His appearances are often accompanied by an elegant accented narrator, and throughout his extensive television life, Mr. Peanut has rarely spoken.

Rate this Dandy:

VN:F [1.9.0_1079]
Foppishness
Dandiness
Coxcombry
Rating: 7.2/10 (7 votes cast)