Tag: Noel Sickles

Researcher Spotlight: Frank Santoro

Frank Santoro is a cartoonist from Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania where he lives and works, and was the recipient of the 2018 Lucy Shelton Caswell Research Award. He is the author of Storeyville, Pompei and most recently Pittsburgh from New York Review Comics. His work has been exhibited at The American Academy of Arts and Letters in New York and at the National Archaeological Museum of Napoli in Italy.

Below, Santoro reflects on his time spent researching at the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum for his recently debuted project, CANIFFER.

Frank Santoro in the Lucy Shelton Caswell Reading Room

Hi my name is Frank Santoro and I am studying the foundational collections of the Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum (BICLM) at The Ohio State University. I am an author, a cartoonist, and a painter. I had the honor of receiving a research grant to study at the BICLM, and I’d like to write a little about my experience.

I also teach the discipline of making comics and have set up my own correspondence course for cartooning. I modeled my school on the Landon School of Cartooning which originated in Cleveland, Ohio. I am from Pittsburgh Pennsylvania, and I have always been fascinated by regionalist art in America from the last 150 years or so. I think there is a strong regionalist voice in the Ohio Valley and I set out to map that lineage through my research at the BICLM. I am attempting to pass on the traditions laid down by the likes of Billy Ireland, Edwina Dumm, Charles Burchfield, Milton Caniff, Noel Sickles, and many other artists who are from Ohio and the tri-state area.

I’d like to speak for the authors, the cartoonists, painters and poets who participate in the oral history of art but who may not publish papers or even have a blog. We love to study, to do research, to compare notes. Most cartoonists aren’t scholars until our obsessive research turns us into an expert or a scholar, or someone calls us one. I was doing research for my fanzine ComicsComics and also for The Comics Journal when I heard about the Lucy Shelton Caswell Research Award. I mean, I was in the BICLM already pulling boxes out of the Milton Caniff collection when I read the announcement. I thought “why not” and applied. I want to continue to study what I call the Ohio Naturalist School. And here I am. I was shocked to receive the award. Very humbled. Like I say, I’m not an academic. No degrees. Art school dropout. However, I’m a cartoonist and I like participating in the oral history of my chosen field. And I think I have a lot to share. Connections between things not often discussed in cartooning. Like music. Did you know that a copy of the sheet music to W.C. Handy ‘s St. Louis Blues is in the Caniff archive with a dedication from the maestro to the maestro? If that ain’t American History, I dunno what is.

My experience as a Lucy Shelton Caswell Research Award winner could not have been better. I went in the summer when the students were not really around. It was hot. But cool and oasis-like in the BICLM. I had such a routine down, day after day, week after week, that I began to feel like a student. It was easy to sink into the Milton Caniff collection and feel his presence on 16th and High, at the intersection where he spent much time as an OSU student. I took a drive down to Chillicothe, Ohio to see where Billy Ireland and Noel Sickles were from. I listened to Edwina Dumm and Lucy Caswell talk about Billy Ireland on an old audiotape recording. I read old comic strips. Slowly. Letters back and forth between Billy Ireland and Noel Sickles. Did you know they wrote to each other pretending that they were soldiers in the American Civil War? I pieced their lives back together from the fragments they left. And what fragments! How lucky we are to have this public institution which exists in order to let anyone participate in this History.It really is hard to grasp how vast the holdings are until you spend time there. And how different it is to participate in Art History in real time. Winsor McCay next to Rory Hayes in the backroom hanging out. Like students in one big school.

CANIFFER is my working manuscript for my research about what I call the Ohio Naturalist School. An unadorned love letter to Milton Caniff, Noel Sickles, Billy Ireland, Edwina Dumm, and C.N. Landon amongst others. I just want to use analog serial means to make inroads towards a big picture study on these great artists. I feel most comfortable using the photocopied fanzine as a platform above all else. Eventually, it’ll be digitized but until then it is a typewriter and a photocopy machine. It’s eccentric but using analog means also lets me feel closer to the time period I am studying.

Thank you to Jenny Robb and Caitlin McGurk. And special thanks to Susan Liberator. And the staff at the front desk of the BICLM. (And thank you to Lucy Caswell and Tom Spurgeon RIP)

Found in the Collection: Mr. Coffee Nerves

Joining the ranks of YoYo Martin as our favorite villains of the comics pages, Mr. Coffee Nerves is a vaudevillian apparition whose arch-nemesis is made of whole wheat and bran, and tastes quite delicious when combined with warm milk. Postum, the coffee-alternative.

“Dad Gives a Good Tip” Postum advertisement. The San Francisco Academy of Comic Art Collection, The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum (click to enlarge)

Paul Arthur’s character Mr. Coffee Nerves gains his pleasure in breaking up families, destroying careers, instigating murders, and other generally evil intentions perfectly suitable for the host of a caffeine headache. Who is this Paul Arthur, you ask? Well, if you couldn’t take a guess from the style, he’s both Milton Caniff and Noel Sickles.

Milton Caniff and Noel Sickles in their New York City studio, 1937. Photo from the Milton Caniff Collection, The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum

The old best friends and native-Ohioans shared a studio at 320 East 42nd Street (which Sickles also called home), where amid pumping out Terry and the Pirates and Scorchy Smith, respectively, the two also moonlighted doing advertisement work. “Paul Arthur” was their chosen non-de-plume, and is a reversal of Caniff’s two middle names. As noted by Bruce Canwell in Scorchy Smith and the Art of Noel Sickles, “Because the deadlines of producing a regular comics feature were relentless, employers were not enamored by the thought of their creators adding to their workload, which increased the risk of artists turning in their strips late”, thus the necessity of a pseudonym.

“Jeanne gets a curtain call” Postum advertisement. The Milton Caniff Collection, The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum (click to enlarge)

The two worked on the Postum advertisements, and many others like it, from roughly 1936-1938. These advertisements would often allow them to rake in triple of what they were making in the syndicates each week.

“Mother Takes a Hand” Postum advertisement. The San Francisco Academy of Comic Art Collection, The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum (click to enlarge)

Coffee in the 1930s, it would seem, is marginally decipherable from crack- barring the employment of Snidely Whiplash’s grandfather as a mascot. We love Sickles and Caniff’s interpretation of the character, as later versions in the 1950s unfortunately added a jet-pack to Nerves’ costume and lost the hat. The two geniuses would collaborate again as Paul Arthur in 1977 on an unsold Bruce Lee comic strip, the original drafts of which reside in our collection at the Cartoon Library.

“Peter Joins The Club” Postum advertisement. The Milton Caniff Collection, The Ohio State University Billy Ireland Cartoon Library & Museum. (click to enlarge)

As a bonus for those especially tickled by Mr. Coffee Nerves- give a listen to hear him in dubious action on a radio commercial for Postum, available through the Old-Time Radio website.