Wartime Wednesday: Albert Staehle
Although photography had been commercially available
since 1839, it was an expensive process. Therefore, newspapers, magazines,
billboards, and posters were produced using illustrations rather than pictures
well in to the 1930s and 1940s. Some of the more famous illustrators include
Charles Dana Gibson, Norman Rockwell, and Beatrix Potter. Artists who were well-known
at the time, but have fallen into obscurity are J.C. Leyendecker, Sarah
Stilwell Weber, Edmund Franklin Ward, and Alfred Staehle.
Born in Munich, Bavaria in 1899, Alfred Staehle came
to America with his parents in 1914. His father and maternal grandfather were both
artists, so Alfred came by his talent naturally. In an effort to improve his
skills, he attended The Wicker School in Detroit and the Arts Student League in
New York. He found early success after entering a poster contest for Borden
milk and was soon providing advertising and cover art for magazines such as The Saturday Evening Post, American Weekly,
Jack & Jill, and Good
Housekeeping. He also created posters, and one of the most prized posters
of the 1939 World’s Fair is his.
A large portion of his work featured animals, and he
was considered by many to be an animal expert. Often using live animals as
models, it is said that Staehle surrounded himself with creatures while working
in his studio. He also painted from pictures, and he eventually married one of
the photographers he hired to photograph his models. Staehle was also
successful with his billboard work, and in 1938 he was awarded the Kerwin H.
Fulton medal for Achievement of Art in Outdoor Advertising.
But he became a household name with the February 19,
1944 issue of The Saturday Evening Post when
he drew a cover that featured a Cocker Spaniel named Butch chewing up ration
coupons. The magazine seemed to sellout overnight, and letters poured into the Post’s offices defending the puppy. A
few readers also sent replacement coupons. Butch was incredibly popular, and he
was featured in twenty-five Post covers
and thirty American Weekly covers,
often getting into trouble for chewing something, “borrowing” an item that didn’t
belong to him, or getting into some sort of predicament. Staehle purchased his
very own “Butch” in June 1944.
Not bad for a small, mischievous puppy.
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