(via THE BLUE LANTERN: Garish Days)
Madame Baker, reprinted from Ulk, 1928, State Museum, Berlin.
Dodo, given name: Dorte Clara Wolff (1907-1998) The artist studied at the prestigious Reimann Art School. She had a successful career in fashion illustration but is best known for her caricatures that appeared in the satirical magazine Ulk, published in Berlin. If you think her images portray alienation between women and men, you have understood her work.
Mickey’s Gala Premiere (by Greenman 2008)
Front row: Marie Dressler, Wallace Beery & Will Rogers
Second row: Groucho Marx. Charlie Chaplin & Lionel Barrymore (as Rasputin)
Back row: Harold Lloyd between two unidentified women
Caricatures of Death Personified
From a pre-Revolutionary magazine, first published in Russia in 1906. Illustrations by Boris Kustodiev.
Personifications of death included depictions of the devastating 1906 drought and ensuing famine, and the ravages of cholera, in the midst of revolutionary uprisings in Moscow.
(via biomedicalephemera)
Dina Galli caricature (by Truus, Bob & Jan too!)
Italian postcard. Caricature by Girus (Giuseppe Russo). It was exposed in 1914 at the first international exhibition of caricatures and humorism in Italy.
Dina Galli (1877-1951) was a classic Italian comedienne who also performed in Italian silent and sound cinema.

Felicien Rops (1833-1898)
Louis Namêche.
Eugene “Zim” Zimmerman
(via Cartoon Portraits of Leading 19th Century Figures (1873) | The Public Domain Review)
Charles Darwin
…Cartoon Portraits and Biographical Sketches of Men of the Day (1873) with drawings by Frederick Watty…
Helen Gurley Brown (February 18, 1922 – August 13, 2012) (by MewDeep)
With Hugh Hefner - Illustration by Jack Rickard for MAD #126, 1969
Mr Joseph Conrad, some where in the Pacific — MB, 1920
Max Beerbohm Caricatures the Literary Life; 100 Years of Illustration








