Saturday, October 13, 2018

Fischetti Travel Sketches, 20th C.

Sketches from the 

John Fischetti Manuscript Collection 
at 
Columbia College Chicago



1945 trip to France
"Main Street St Laurent Brittanny"
France, 1945

1948 trip to New York
New York, 1948

1949 trip to Denmark a

1949 trip to Denmark
1949 trip to Denmark b
"American shoes proved to be much more interesting
to the Danes than the American wearing them"

1949 trip to Denmark d
"The Danes really live when they greet each other

1949 trip to Denmark e
"5 O'Clock Rush"

1949 trip to Denmark f
Denmark, 1949
1949 trip to France a
"Traffic"
1949 trip to France
France, 1949

1953 trip to France
"Journal de Paris - McCarthy: 'J'accuse!!' "
Paris, 1953

1960 trip to Italy a

1960 trip to Italy b

1960 trip to Italy
"Rialto Bridge Venice"
Italy, 1960

1961 trip to Washington DC b

1961 trip to Washington DC
President Kennedy's Oval Office
Washington DC, 1961
1970 trip to Chicago
"Other side of the tracks -- Canal Street"
Chicago, 1970

1970 trip to Washington DC c
"It's windy"
Washington DC, 1970

All illustrations are © the Estate or Assignees of John Fischetti.
The images have been posted here with permission.
"John Fischetti was born in Brooklyn, New York on Sept. 27, 1916, the youngest in an Italian family of four children. His urge to draw developed early and, in fact, he graduated from the Pratt Technical Institute before earning his high school diploma. After graduation he went to California and worked for the Disney Studio.

Eye strain forced him to give up animation and he moved to Chicago where he began working for Coronet and Esquire magazines. When Marshall Field started the Chicago Sun and bought up the Coronet/Esquire syndicate, Fischetti began doing political cartoons for the Sun; however, World War II intervened and he spent the latter part of it cartooning for Stars and Stripes.

When his Sun job was no longer available after the war, he moved to New York and joined Newspaper Enterprise Association (NEA), and then the New York Herald Tribune. It folded in 1966 and he moved back to Chicago and the Chicago Daily News, where he was given complete autonomy to choose his styles and topics.

Fischetti was awarded the Pulitzer Prize in 1968. After the Daily News ceased publication in 1978, he finished his career at the Chicago Sun-Times. John Fischetti died on Nov. 18, 1980." [source]

Following Fischetti's death, an annual editorial cartoon award was established in his name, administered by the School of Journalism at the Columbia College in Chicago. [link]

The John Fischetti Manuscript Collection was recently digitised by Columbia College and includes a large number of the artist's sketch books encompassing original political cartoons, completed comics, preliminary and rejected drawings and a collection of his travel sketches.