
|
In 1930 Bruce Bairnsfather had signed up with
The Leigh Bureau of Lectures and Entertainments in New York, to undertake a
season on the coast-to-coast lecture circuit. Following a highly successful tour season in 1930-31, and “in response to a demand
from those organisations who have engaged him” Bairnsfather’s agent decided
to capitalise on the popularity of his latest new speaker by publishing a
special volume of cartoons encompassing both his current output in various
American magazines, and a selection of
the Fragments from France
drawings which had first brought him to the public’s attention, back in 1915.
The Leigh Bureau decided to produce two
versions of their new book—a ‘regular’ or ‘standard’ copy, and a deluxe
edition which would appeal to the more serious collector. The standard edition of The Collected Drawings was
itself “very special” - finely printed
on Warren’s Luster Coated Paper, cloth bound in blue with the title
gold-stamped, and presented in a smart, colour dust jacket featuring BB’s
most famous cartoon. Priced at $3.00 it is certain to have been very popular
with Bairnsfather’s many fans in 1931. The deluxe edition, priced at $10.00 was probably aimed at the slightly more up-market and affluent Bairnsfather enthusiasts of the day. In a letter written in 1932, W. Colston Leigh commented that “as a ‘Collectors item’ it is unsurpassed.” Half leather bound with black leather spine and red/orange boards, and printed on an even more superior weight & quality paper than the ‘standard’ edition, the |








|
DUST JACKET TO STANDARD EDITION OF THE COLLECTED DRAWINGS OF
BRUCE BAIRNSFATHER (1931) |
|
advertisements used by Judge
magazine in OctOBER/NovEMBER 1931 to sell their $3.00 signed edition
of The
Collected Drawings of Bruce Bairnsfather. |
|
DUST JACKET TO LIMITED EDITION OF THE COLLECTED DRAWINGS OF BRUCE BAIRNSFATHER |
|
"Pity there ain't one
more, Bert.We could play bridge." FROM THE LIMITED EDITION OF
THE
COLLECTED DRAWINGS |
|
"CAMERAMAN ON JUNGLE
PICTURE GETS EXCELLENT CLOSE-UP OF PYTHON."
FROM THE STANDARD EDITION OF THE COLLECTED DRAWINGS |
|
$10.00 version was limited to only 970 copies,
each containing “an original, signed drawing by the artist.” Both editions of The Collected Drawings of Bruce Bairnsfather—”Privately
Printed by W. Colston Leigh, Inc, 521 Fifth Avenue, New York—Lecture Managers
and Publishers for world famous celebrities” were published in October 1931,
around the same time Old Bill’s creator was embarking on a second lecture
season with the Leigh Bureau. Neither edition of The Collected Drawings of Bruce Bairnsfather could
be purchased through regular bookstores, both only being available direct
from the Leigh Bureau. However as part of their agreement with the publishers
of Judge
magazine for allowing a large number of BB’s cartoons from that periodical to
be reproduced in the book, the lecture bureau must have agreed to the sale of
a certain number of copies to the magazine, for them to sell to their
readers. Throughout October and November 1931, Judge published regular half-page
advertisements offering autographed copies of The Collected Drawings
at $3.00 each—the same price that the Leigh Bureau was selling it for,
unsigned! |
|
There is no record of how many autographed
copies of The Collected Drawings were
sold to Judge
readers, but they turn up from time to time and are quite easy to distinguish
as they just have Bairnsfather’s signature on a blank fly leaf. Now and then
an example will come to light which is signed and
has a lightning original sketch of Old Bill. These almost certainly started
off as the unsigned $3.00 edition sold through the Leigh Bureau, and had both
the autograph and sketch added by BB at the request of the books owner, at a
later date. The standard edition of The Collected Drawings
contains a total of seventy-six published cartoons—eleven Fragments from France
from The Bystander,
sixty drawings from BB’s series following Old Bill and Bert on their travels
around America from Judge,
and four non-Old Bill cartoons from The New
Yorker, Life
and College Humor.
By way of an Introduction the book has a
Summons and Complaint made against Bruce Bairnsfather by William Busby
(“otherwise known as Old Bill”) in which “the plaintiff alleges that for a
number of years, the defendant has, with extreme vulgarity and malice, made |
|
use of the features and peculiarities of the
plaintiff’s dial, pan, or face, in order to provoke mirth and ridicule
throughout the world.” In response, BB “decided to put all the evidence at my
disposal before the public and await its just opinion. In the following pages
will be found an extensive array of drawings depicting the life and
adventures of Old Bill and his devoted side-kick, Bert….these...will give the
reader ample scope in which to form his opinion as to the merits of the case
now filed against me.” On the opposite page were several “malicious
caricatures” which “Old Bill submits...as evidence to support his case.” |
|
Following this is “The Evolution of Old Bill”
- written by BB and accompanied by four illustrations depicting Bill in
various stages from infancy to the character we all know and recognise. Although Bruce Bairnsfather is forever linked
with Old Bill, we must not forget that during his long career he did from
time to time produce cartoons in which his famous character did not appear.
His cartoons drawn for The New
Yorker, Life
and College Humor which
appear in The Collected Drawings, are an interesting contrast to the more
familiar Fragments from France and
Judge
illustrations in the book. Limited Edition copies of The Collected Drawings of Bruce Bairnsfather are
distinguishable by their half-leather binding and red/orange cover, as
opposed to the blue boards of the standard edition. The superior edition is
rarely found today in it’s original dust jacket—a dark charcoal/black with
the title of the book in gold lettering, and featuring a small drawing of Old
Bill in civvies, also in gold. None of the 970 copies of the Limited Edition
is numbered. In each book though, Bruce Bairnsfather has drawn a superb
sketch of Old Bill, finished off with
his familiar bold, flowing signature. The drawings have all been executed on
the blank page opposite the title page, and are protected by a clear tissue sheet. Despite his ability to
dash off a sketch of Old Bill at a lightning speed, it must have taken BB
some considerable time to complete such a large number of these special
drawings. |
|
Although at first glance the content of the
Limited Edition (other than having the original sketch) appears to be
identical to the standard edition, closer examination reveals that it in fact
contains eight additional cartoons (one of which is illustrated, top left).
These are all from his weekly series about Old Bill and Bert in Judge magazine, and appear after the
drawing “Hey, who’s drivin’, me or you?” At $10.00 the Limited Edition of The Collected Drawings
would have been quite an expensive addition to one’s library, in 1931.
Despite not being sold through bookstores both editions would almost
certainly have sold well, as Bairnsfather was immensely popular on the
lecture circuit and his talks were seen by hundreds of people in each place
he visited, all potential buyers of this latest ‘souvenir’ celebrating the
work of their favourite cartoonist. With such a high number of ‘limited’ copies of
The Collected Drawings of
Bruce Bairnsfather being produced (certainly in
comparison to the Limited Edition of 100 copies of Bullets & Billets published
in 1917 by Grant Richards), it would seem reasonable to imagine there would
be quite a few around for today’s collectors to snap up. Unfortunately
though, the Limited Edition of the book is particularly scarce, and even the
more common standard edition is highly sought after by collectors.
Interestingly, signed copies of the latter (either examples of the
autographed edition sold through Judge
magazine, or copies signed at a later date by BB) come up for sale almost as
regularly as un-signed copies! As this article has shown, although W. Colston
Leigh only published two editions of The Collected
Drawings, ardent collectors should also be on the
look-out for the $3.00 signed version (as sold through Judge), to ‘complete’ the variants
of this title in their Bairnsfather library. |
|
ORIGINAL SKETCH FROM LIMITED EDITION OF THE COLLECTED
DRAWINGS OF BRUCE BAIRNSFATHER |
|
ORIGINAL SKETCH FROM LIMITED EDITION OF THE COLLECTED DRAWINGS OF BRUCE BAIRNSFATHER |
|
& Old Bill Postcards |
||||||
|
Sergeant! |
the Wars |