James Montgomery Flagg was an
early master of pen and ink, but he was much more.
Born in 1877, he grew up along with the reproduction technology that allowed
artists to select the pen as the illustrative tool of choice. Charles Dana
Gibson, who pioneered many of the techniques that Flagg would draw upon, was
ten years older. Others born within a year of Flagg include Stanley M.
Arthurs, Ivan Bilibin,
Walter Appleton Clark, Fanny Y. Cory,
Frank
Leyendecker, Norman Price,
Harry Rountree,
Frank
Schoonover, Everett Shinn,
J. Allen
St. John, Sarah Stilwell, and J. Scott Williams.
A true child prodigy, Flagg sold his first
illustration, to the prestigious St. Nicholas Magazine no less, at
the age of twelve.
This early sale proved not to be a fluke. By
the age of 15 he was on staff at both Life and Judge, the
premier humor magazines of the day. Lleft is an 1894 illustration from
Life. Right is an early drawing from Judge, probably
circa 1905.
It's
kind of hard to imagine today, but the teenage Flagg grew up in the company
of some of the most respected magazine editors of the day. Drawing was his
passion and the traditional pastimes of youth were of no interest to him.
Although he spent several years in art schools, most notably the Art
Students League (1894-1898), his real education came from the
material that passed over the desks of the editors of St. Nicholas,
Judge and Life. These he was allowed to study and the lessons
he learned from them were more valuable than all of his schooling. Those
same publishers made use of the young Flagg for his earliest magazine covers
are from 1895 and '96.
From
1898-1900 Flagg studied painting in England and France. His first book was
Yankee Girls Abroad (1900). That same year he had a portrait accepted
to the Paris Salon, but he felt that painting was not his forte and returned
to illustration. Above left is an image from the January 1902 issue of
Harper's Monthly - perhaps the only work he did for the magazine.
Most of the early years of the century were
still spent at Judge and Life and Harper's Weekly -
Life released four collections of his "limericks" (just clever poems,
really) in 1904. By 1905 he began to illustrate books again. At right is one
of the plates from An Orchard Princess from that year. These early
efforts were mainly paintings, despite his focus on pen & ink at the humor
magazines. It wasn't until about 1906 that his recognizable pen style
appears in his book illustrations. A good example is show below from
Simon the Jester (1909).

 A
collection of his large drawings for Harper's Weekly saw print as
City People in 1909. The Adventures of Kitty Cobb was published
in 1912.This large book (12"x12") was a series of plates with a paragraph of
text below each. Throughout the teens and early 20's, Flagg's book
illustration output was prodigious. I have 35 titles alone from 1908 to
1925, and that doesn't count his numerous magazine appearances- like the
1911 Life cover at right.
Flagg was a rakish fellow whose cocky
self-assurance served him well in the highly competitive illustration
markets. Stories abound of his deeds and misdeeds. Susan E. Meyer in her
excellent James Montgomery Flagg relates how he persevered in his
attempts to break into the Scribner's Magazine market. He was
finally, so the story goes, asked to tackle an assignment that had stumped
three other artists. Flagg supposedly solved the problems of this difficult
Voodoo storyline and became a regular contributor.
All well and good, except I've checked all
the Scribner's from 1904 through 1907, when he is an established contributor
to the magazine, and there doesn't seem to be any JMF Voodoo story. In fact,
his first appearances in 1906 are rather pedestrian. But it makes a great
story...
Flagg
was outspoken and lived a bohemian style of life. Despite a marriage that
lasted from 1899 until his wife's death in 1923, he was known for his
cavorting around town with pals like John Barrymore. He was close friends
with many of his contemporaries: Arthur William Brown,
Walter Appleton Clark,
Ham Fisher, Rube Goldberg, etc. Flagg was a founder member of the infamous
Dutch Treat Club in 1906 (its president in 1913), a loose association of
creative types that turned into an organization still going strong today.
He wrote the first of their annual
productions and was elected an honorary life member in 1926. By then he'd
dropped out of active participation, but when the Depression hit and the
club loosened up, he was back. He began to contribute artwork to the
wonderful annuals that were distributed at the yearly dinners. At right is
one from 1935. It seems that the more bawdy and risque and boisterous the
organization became, the more Monty wanted to be a part of it. The
ribaldry reached its zenith in the early years of WWII. As the rest of the
world loosened up, the naughtiness wasn't quite as much fun I guess. By
1950, while the annual books still had a few gorgeous drawings and
paintings by the likes of Bradshaw Crandell, but were mostly less daring,
Monty Flagg was no longer participating.
 He
was a member of the Society of Illustrators (his portrait of friend Charles
Dana Gibson at right appeared in the 1911 SofI Annual), the Lotos
Club, the Players Club and the Artists and Writers Club. And he was both. He
wrote for Life and Judge, and even wrote and acted in silent
films. These were so well received that during World War One he was asked to
write promotional films for the Marines and for the Red Cross. It was also
during WWI that his famous painting of Uncle Sam pointing at the viewer with
the caption "I Want YOU for U.S. Army" was published. He created 45 other
patriotic posters for the war effort including the powerful "Wake Up America
Day" at left.
After the war, it was the magazines of
America that were his showroom. Nearly every major publisher featured his
art at one time or another. In (very) rough chronological sequence he was in
Photoplay, McClures, Cosmopolitan, The Saturday
Evening Post, Redbook, Hearst's International, Liberty,
Colliers, Women's Home Companion, Ladies Home Journal,
The American Weekly and many others. He drew caricatures of movie stars
for Photoplay until 1950. A collection of some of these drawings was
released as Celebrities in 1951.
A
few books were sprinkled amongst the magazines. There was the riotous
Virgins in Cellophane in 1932 and his autobiography, Roses and
Buckshot in 1946. The dust jacket for the 1934 P.G. Wodehouse offering,
at right, may have been an illustration for the story's initial appearance
in The Saturday Evening Post. Flagg did illustrations for many of the
Jeeves novels as they were serialized. He did numerous drawings for the
Cosmopolitan serialization of Thank You, Jeeves, also in 1934 and
several other titles in Colliers - it seems that Wodehouse got around
almost as much as Flagg.

When he wasn't illustrating or drawing
caricatures or painting portraits, he would paint for himself. He was an
artist and felt that it was in the blood, not taught in a school. He
dismissed his schooling as wasted time. Indeed, he was working
professionally throughout the entire process. He was outspoken and frank.
His friends loved him for it and it served to keep away those who didn't.
When he died in 1960, the members of the
service included Dean Cornwell, Jack Dempsey, Everett Raymond Kinstler, Arthur William
Brown and many other friends of long-standing.
He was elected to the Society of Illustrators
Hall of Fame in 1980. |