“TO BE CARICATURED… IS ONE OF THE PENALTIES OF GREATNESS”: MILLIONAIRES OF AMERICA, 1902, WITH 12 TINTED WOODBLOCK CARICATURES OF THE WEALTHY
CRAMER, Max, and de FORNARO, Carlo. Millionaires of America. New York: Medusa, 1902. Small folio, original half gray cloth portfolio, original pictorial boards, original ribbon ties.
First edition of these 12 tinted woodblock caricatures of the prominent millionaires of the turn of the 20th century, loose in original portfolio, as issued.
Caricatures include those of J.P. Morgan, Andrew Carnegie (sitting on a stack of books), Russell Sage, Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, W.C. Whitney, James J. Hill, George J. Gould (riding a polo pony), John Jacob Astor, O.H.P. Belmont, Charles M. Schwab (hat in hand), Tom L. Johnson, and Senator William Andrews Clark. Each subject is assigned his own motto and tongue-in-cheek coat-of-arms or emblem. “Perhaps it is well that some one should come out and ‘stand for’ the collection of pictures burlesquing certain well-known citizens of this town and some of whom, it is reported, have already lost their tempers over the manner in which they have been depicted. To be caricatured, however, is one of the penalties of greatness, even when that greatness merely consists in the possession of great wealth. When caricatures are true to life, as in many cases in the present instance, there is no denying that the public derive a certain satisfaction from seeing the victim writhe. Therefore, perhaps the eminent citizens whose counterfeit presentments are to be found in the book, might better conceal their chagrin and take it all good-humoredly. Such was Pliny’s advice to the victims of caricature in ancient days” (New York Times, January 10, 1903). Laid in is a black-and-white newspaper reproduction of the caricature of Russell Sage. Early dealer description tipped in.
Plates fine; light wear to extremities of portfolio. A fine copy. Extremely scarce.