The Fall's album Ersatz GB is unusual in that there are three versions of the cover artwork in circulation.
This blog post examines all three versions of the artwork, tracing the origins of as many of the collage elements as possible. Some of them remain untraced at this point, but if they're ever tracked down in the future then I'll add the information here.
I've found that most of the clippings can be traced to a few main sources. These are, the New York Times - mostly from the issue dated 31 July 2011; the Metro - mostly from the issue dated 2 August 2011; The Daily Mail of 3 August 2011; and an issue of a 1950s American men's magazine called Male.
An Artwork Version Chronology
The release of the album, with details of its title and track listing, were trailed in August 2011 with a feature in Mojo magazine. The first posts about it on the Fall Online Forum were on 20 August [see https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/thefall/snippets-in-magazines-etc-re-the-fall-t15374-s1144.html].
On 7 September 2011, Cherry Red published confirmation of the album's 14 November release date [see archived web page here: https://web.archive.org/web/20110924001707/http://www.cherryred.co.uk/shopexd.asp?id=3339].
The posting included an image that looked like it might be the cover art. At any rate, that was how fans interpreted it. This was it:
Ersatz GB (September announcement artwork) |
Some fans liked it, others didn't. It sparked my curiosity - where did all the components of the collage come from?
On 8 September 2011, the day after the publication of the image, I posted the results of my detective work (https://www.tapatalk.com/groups/thefall/ersatz-gb-t31092-s199.html).
Most of the headlines I was able to identify apparently came from the New York Times of 31 July 2011. One was from the same newspaper on 29th July. There was uncertainly about others. More elements were identified after another FOF user posted a larger version of the image in October. In addition to more New York Times headlines, a clipping from the Daily Mail dated 2 August 2011 was found, which led to more from that source. And FOF user Buy Kurious! confirmed that the "Bret and Bart" clipping in the top left corner came from Dan Spiegle's Maverick comic - although my subsequent research has established that it's from a reprint rather than the original.
By early October, Cherry Red were saying that the artwork had not been finalised. The picture accompanying the album on Amazon was changed to a photograph of the group.
On 12 October, Cherry Red published new cover artwork (at any rate, that was when FOF user Little Frank spotted it), which turned out to be the version released:
Ersatz GB - the final cover artwork |
A third version of the cover art was revealed when Cherry Red published their "microsite" for the album (https://ersatzgb.yolasite.com/). They described this as the "original cover".
Ersatz GB - the microsite "original cover" |
On release (as per the credits list below), the artwork was attributed to Mark Kennedy and Mark E. Smith. It is unclear whether Kennedy was involved with all three versions, but we may as well assume that he was.
Ersatz GB - credits page, reverse of album cover |
Ersatz GB - Reverse of the back cover |
I'll look at each version of the artwork in the order presented above.
It's worth noting a couple of the challenges in identifying sources. First of all, some of the clippings are indistinct or indecipherable; it is not even always entirely clear where the boundaries of an image are, or whether two or more images overlap - in other words, the number of clippings may be undercounted or overcounted. And secondly, some of the clippings feature text which appears in more than one edition of a newspaper, or more than once in a particular edition of a newspaper. In those cases, I've gone with the edition most frequently identified as a source, or with a page of an edition which is known to have been used as a source.
Finally, thanks to all the FOF users who took part in discussion of the cover artwork, in particular user @BuyKurious.
A Statistical Analysis of Sources
The September 2011 Cherry Red Announcement Artwork
"As Bret and Bart approach Ed Smith's claim..."
Source: "Ghost Town Gold". Maverick Television Story Book (undated, c.1960), p.44 (story pp.31-49). |
Maverick Annual, 1962 |
Maverick Annual, 1962 |
Maverick Annual, 1982 |
Maverick Comic Album, no. 1, 1961 |
Maverick Television Story Book, 1960 |
Maverick: A Television Story Book, 1961 |
"Guilty Pleasures"
Source: "Guilty Pleasures". Metro, 2 August 2011. Text online: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/22-23 |
Vaseline Theory
Source: "From Figure of Fun to England's Lucky Charm", and "Hot Spot Boffins Sweep Away Vaughan's Vaseline Theory", by Paul Newman. Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.68. |
A strip apparently torn from the right hand side of a page of the Daily Mail.
"Liberty Try to Put Down Roots at Temporary Home"
Source: "Liberty Try to Put Down Roots at Temporary Home", by Brian Heyman. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sports Sunday section, p.9. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/sports/basketball/wnbas-liberty-getting-comfortable-in-newark.html |
"You Think I'm Crazy, Don't You?"
Source: "The Fifth Down: 'You Think I'm Crazy, Don't You?' ", by Lang Whitaker. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sports Sunday section, p.10. Text online: https://archive.nytimes.com/fifthdown.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/07/30/a-qa-with-jerry-glanville/ |
Clipping from an interview with N.F.L. coach Jerry Glanville.
"Halted on the Way to South Williamsport"
Source: "Halted on the Way to South Williamsport", by Paul Post. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sports Sunday section, p.1. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/sports/for-uganda-little-leaguers-exhilaration-and-then-heartbreak.html (paywall) |
All photos by Tadej Znidarcic for the New York Times. |
Shark
Source: "We Treasure Hunted the Bottom", by Philippe Tailliez. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.82 (article pp.82-97).
According to Wikipedia, Tailliez (1905-2002) was a "friend and colleague of Jacques Cousteau" and a pioneer of underwater exploration. The photos illustrating the article, including the shark cutting, were taken by him.
Source: "We Treasure Hunted the Bottom", by Philippe Tailliez. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.82 (article pp.82-97). |
According to Wikipedia, Tailliez (1905-2002) was a "friend and colleague of Jacques Cousteau" and a pioneer of underwater exploration. The photos illustrating the article, including the shark cutting, were taken by him.
Jim Thome
Source: "Pursuit of 600 Interrupted by Aches: Age Takes Toll on Thome's Power", by Pat Borzi. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sports Sunday section, p.2. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/sports/baseball/thome-battles-age-in-pursuit-of-no-600.html (paywall) |
David Joles / Star Tribune via Associated Press (Source: Alamy) |
A story about how soon-to-turn-41-years-of-age Jim Thome was battling injury while chasing the target of being only the eighth player in baseball history to hit 600 home runs. He was to retire from Major League baseball in October 2012, having hit 612 home runs.
"For Asian..."
Source: "Noticed: For Asian Stars, Many Web Fans", by Austin Considine. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Styles section, p.6. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/fashion/for-asian-stars-many-web-fans.html (paywall) |
Asian roles in Hollywood have come a long way since Mickey Rooney played a Japanese neighbor in ''Breakfast at Tiffany's.'' But the dearth of Asian lead characters today suggests that there is still a way to go.
It's an entirely different story, however, on YouTube, where a young generation of Asian-Americans has found a voice (and millions of eager fans) on the democratized platform.
"Ira -"
Source: "On The Runway: From Iraq to Paris", by Guy Trelay. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Styles section, p.4. Text online: https://archive.nytimes.com/query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage-990DE4DC153EF932A05754C0A9679D8B63.html (text only) |
About Caesar Stovall, army medic-turned-model.
A tricky one to confirm with any certainty, because there's not much text to go on. But this seems to me the most likely clipping source, given how many other clippings come from the 31 July issue of the New York Times, and the lack of any alternatives in the headlines on that day.
Our Lady of the Highway
"Our Lady of the Highway" |
The image is not very distinct but this appears to be an odd-one-out element of the collage design, because it's a religious object rather than a newspaper or magazine clipping.
"Our Lady of the Highway" (or "Highways", or "Our Lady of the Way") is one of the names sometimes used by Catholics for the Virgin Mary, regarded as a patron of travellers. Jewellery, pendants, medals and other devotional items can be bought featuring the Virgin Mary in this guise, often paired with an image of St. Christopher (patron saint of travellers).
The text probably reads, "Our Lady of the Highway, Pray for Us". But it might be "Our Lady of the Highway, Protect Us".
The particular item pictured is probably a lenticular image, showing Mary or St. Christopher as the image is moved. I located a few examples of these on the web, including lenticular images incorporated into Zippo lighters.
Warhol's Mao
Source: "Opportunity on Madison" by Holland Cotter. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, pp.1, 20.
Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/arts/design/what-the-met-should-do-when-it-moves-into-the-whitney.html (paywall)
The collage features two pieces of a cutting of a picture of Mao Zedong - one of Warhol's 199 silkscreen prints of Mao. The cutting has been taken from Robert Caplin's photograph on the second page of the article (p.20). The photograph features the then director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Thomas P. Campbell (he occupied the position from 2009-2017), alongside Joel Shapiro's sculpture, "Untitled", and the Warhol Mao silkscreen.
The photograph in colour:
Photo by Robert Caplin for the New York Times (2011)
Cotter's article is about, and explores the possibilities of, the Metropolitan Museum of Art's announcement in May 2011 that it would be leasing the Marcel Breuer-designed building on Madison Avenue which had been the home of the Whitney Museum of Modern Arts since 1966 (The Whitney was moving to new premises).
Joel Shapiro, "Untitled" (2000-2001): https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/491977
The Warhol silkscreen print of Mao is one of 199 - probably this one: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/481657
More on the Warhol silkscreens of Mao: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/677119
Warhol's print is based on this image by an unknown photographer: https://www.metmuseum.org/art/collection/search/296344
Source: "Opportunity on Madison" by Holland Cotter. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, pp.1, 20.
Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/arts/design/what-the-met-should-do-when-it-moves-into-the-whitney.html (paywall)
Photo by Robert Caplin for the New York Times (2011)
"Sports Sunday"
"... Need Fixing"
Source: "Where Many Things Besides the Islanders Need Fixing", by George Vecsey. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sports Sunday section, p.9. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/sports/hockey/for-islanders-economic-reality-makes-new-arena-a-hard-sell.html (paywall) |
"The..."
Source: "The New York Times", front page title. |
"Cool in a Meltdown"
Source: "What I Wore: Michael Wolff: Keeping His Cool in a Meltdown", by Bee Shyuan Chang. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Styles section, p.7. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/fashion/michael-wolff-on-looking-cool-in-the-heat.html (paywall) |
A fashion/style-related diary item about Michael Wolff, editorial director of Adweek.
"Field" / "Babies to Heroes"
Source: "Babies to Heroes: A Field Guide to Big-Screen Men", by A.O. Scott and Manohla Dargis. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, p.1 (article pp.1,6). Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/movies/male-archetypes-in-the-movies-big-baby-to-brave-boy.html (paywall) |
There are times, particularly during the summer, when the big screen seems overrun with the alpha and omega of contemporary masculinity: the big babies of comedies and the hard-bodied manly men of superhero fantasies. There are a handful of other types in play, yet even these represent a fairly limited spectrum, from the idealized to the abject. The movies may be male dominated, but images of men are surprisingly narrow: often missing in action is the regular guy who wakes up every morning, kisses his wife (or husband) and manages not to do anything especially silly or heroic in the course of his working day.
"Apocalypse Garage"
Source: "Build the Apocalypse Inside Your Garage", by Mikado Murphy. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, p.8. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/movies/bellflower-has-homemade-inventions-in-front-of-and-on-camera.html (paywall) |
The article is about some technical aspects of the film Bellflower, directed by Evan Glodell.
"Moves at Trade Deadline"
Source: "Moves at Trade Deadline Can Be Great Deal of Trouble", by Rob Meyer. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sports Sunday section, p.10. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/sports/baseball/mlb-trade-deadline-can-be-great-deal-of-trouble.html (paywall) |
The article is about the transfer market for baseball players.
"Happily"
Source: "Happily Ever After, 'I Do' or Not", by Ruth La Ferla. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.12. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/fashion/weddings/arnold-scaasi-and-parker-ladd-50-years-together-and-more-to-come.html (paywall) |
This is the only occasion in the 31 July 2011 issue of the New York Times in which the word "happily" appears in a headline. Since most of the clippings used in this version of the cover design do come from the NYT of that date, it seems safe to conclude that this is the correct source.
An article about same-sex marriage. Here are the opening paragraphs of the piece:
Arnold Scaasi was once asked by a writer for The Times whether, should same-sex marriage become legal, he would wed his partner, Parker Ladd.
''Oh, I don't know,'' Mr. Scaasi demurred. ''We've been together for so long. We don't need a contract to know that we care about each other.''
But after the Marriage Equality Act became law in New York State this month, Mr. Scaasi reversed himself. With Mr. Ladd, he announced to 100 or so of their closest friends that they planned to officially seal their bond, which has endured for 50 years, with a private civil ceremony on July 26, followed by a lavish reception at Le Cirque.
"Learn Baking at Home"
"Eccentrically"
Source: "Straddling the Border, Eccentrically". New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, pp.21-22.
Text Online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/arts/music/ximena-sarinanas-self-titled-new-album.html (paywall)
There are two "Eccentrically" cuttings in the collage, both taken from Jon Pareles' review of an album by the Mexican singer-songwriter Ximena Sariñana. The first cutting, with the text underneath, is definitely the headline from p.22, and so it seems reasonable to conclude the second cutting is from the main headline from p.21.
Source: "Straddling the Border, Eccentrically". New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, pp.21-22.
Text Online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/arts/music/ximena-sarinanas-self-titled-new-album.html (paywall)
Fox Hunters
Source: "Evening Hours: Party Animals", by Bill Cunningham. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Styles section, p.11. Text Online at: Party Animals, "New York Times", 31 July 2011 (NYT archive). |
The photo is of members of the Millbrook Hunt, an organisation founded in New York in the 1890s.
Trumpeter
Source: "Vows: Audrey Saunders and Robert Hess", by Robert Simonson. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Styles section, Weddings/Celebrations, p.13. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/fashion/weddings/audrey-saunders-and-robert-hess-vows.html (paywall) |
"Pain" / "Poetry"
Source: "Finding Poetry in a Couple's Pain", by Dennis Lim. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, p.8 (article pp.8, 13). Text Online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/movies/pietro-marcellos-mouth-of-the-wolf-follows-2-underdogs.html (paywall) |
The same headline appears over the second half of the article on p.13, but I've gone with p.8 because other clippings are taken from p.8. But here's the headline as it appears on p.13:
Three clippings can I think be sourced to this article, two from the title and one from the illustrative publicity photograph.
Credit: Indigo Film |
Wikipedia: "The Mouth of the Wolf"
IDFA Institute: "The Mouth of the Wolf"
"We Are All Lost Children"
Source: Cartoon by Evan D. Diamond. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.70. |
Jeneil Williams
Source: "Evening Hours: Party Animals", by Bill Cunningham. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Styles section, p.11. Text Online at: Party Animals, "New York Times", 31 July 2011 (NYT archive). |
War Horse
Flyer for the Broadway production at Lincoln Center Theater, which ran between 2011-2013. |
The Rosicrucians
"You'll Like This..."
Source: "Sooty and Weep: Paul Daniels in Hospital After Puppet Throws a Pizza at Him", by Jen Blackburn. The Sun, 3 August 2011, p.9. |
Sooty is a famous British puppet (Sweep is his puppet friend, hence the pun), created by Harry Corbett in the 1950s, and Paul Daniels was a magician and TV light entertainment personality. Daniels died in 2016. When Harry Corbett retired he passed Sooty to his son Peter (performing as Matthew), and when Matthew retired he passed Sooty on to Richard Cadell. It's Richard pictured in the article with (left to right) Sooty, Sweep and Soo.
"6 Men Can Kill An Ump"
Source: "6 Men Can Kill an Ump", by George Barr (as told to Martin Abramson). Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.58 (article, pp.39, 56, 58). |
I've been sat on and spat on, blasphemed in every language and dialect except Hindustani, conked with beer cans, stones, ice cream boxes, rotten tomatoes, and leftover liverwurst sandwiches. (p.39)
I think it’s time that an umpire broke with the old precedent of suffering in silence and talked back, loud and clear. I think you should know the inside facts about the guys who are really out to kill the umpire. And I don’t mean the hysterical home-town fans who get carried away in moments of frenzy. I mean the professionals who should know better - the players and managers who trigger the actions that incite demonstrations. (p.56).
"A Lost Child..."
Source: "Modern Love: A Lost Child, but Not Mine", by Kassi Underwood. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Styles section, p.6. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/fashion/a-lost-child-but-not-mine-modern-love.html (paywall) |
From the article:
On the third anniversary of my abortion, I found out via MySpace that my ex-boyfriend was having a baby with another woman. It was none of my business, except I somehow convinced myself that his new baby was a replica of ours, and as such I felt a sense of ownership, of responsibility for the child's well-being.
The leaf/tree clipping comes from Brian Rea's accompanying illustration.
By Brian Rea |
"It Is Easy Being Green"
Source: "It Is Easy Being Green", CIRCA jewellers advert. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Styles section, p.6. |
All three images and both headlines on this page were cuttings sources.
Sky Watch I
The Maid
Source: "The Week Ahead". New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, pp.2. |
The caption reads:
Clara Bow, right, in John Francis Dillon's "Call Her Savage," which is being shown on Sunday and Monday as part of the Film Forum's precode festival.
Wikipedia: Call Her Savage (1932).
Pre-code.com: Call Her Savage (1932)
"Bring Back Poppy"
Source: "Bring Back Poppy", by Thomas L. Friedman. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.11. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/opinion/sunday/friedman-bring-back-poppy.html (paywall) |
Bobby Kirk
Source: "Bogart Journal: He Said It Was Too Hot to Fish, And That Was Just for Starters", by Kim Severson. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.12. Text online at: https:/www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/us/31fish.html (paywall) |
"My Forty Years As A Vice Prober"
Source: "My Forty Years as a Vice Prober", by Peter Carroll (as told to Theodore Irwin) Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.11 |
"David Yerushalmi Has Quietly Led a National Movement"
Source: "Behind an Anti-Shariah Push: Orchestrating a Seemingly Grass-Roots Campaign", by Andrea Elliott. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.1. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/us/31shariah.html (paywall) |
"David Yerushalmi has quietly led a national movement" is the caption to Fred R. Conrad's photograph of Yerushalmi.
Fred R. Conrad/New York Times. Source: https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/imagepages/2011/07/31/us/shariah-pic.html |
"Show"
Source: "With Tannenbaum, Jets Show Audacity From the Top Down", by Ben Shipigel. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sports Sunday section p.5. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/sports/football/the-jets-tannenbaum-this-is-your-captain-speaking.html (paywall) |
The single word "show" is hard to pin down, but I believe this to be the only time it occurs in a headline in the heavily-used 31 July 2011 edition of the New York Times.
You Are Here
Source: either Contents page, The New York Times Magazine, 31 July 2011, p.4 or "Man Of The (Fine) Cloth", by Michael Brendan Dougherty. The New York Times Magazine, 31 July 2011, p.14. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/magazine/you-are-here-money-cometh-to-me-now.html (paywall) |
The Camel
Source: Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.68. |
The image of the camel illustrates a story entitled "Double Ambush" (pp.17, 68-71); it's a detail of a larger photograph that appears with the first page of the story:
"Rim King" - America's Favourite Eyeglasses
Source: Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.62. |
The cutting of a pair of glasses is taken from an eye-test kit advert in Male magazine.
Rosella Atkinson, by Frank Bender
Source: "Frank Bender, 70, 'Recomposer' of Faces of the Dead", by Margalit Fox. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.20. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/us/31bender.html (paywall) |
The source of the image is Margalit Fox's obituary of the forensic sculptor Frank Bender, who died on 28 July 2011. The picture (which is credited to Frank Bender, although presumably it was not taken by him but comes from his collection) is of Rosella Marie Atkinson, an 18-year old who disappeared in 1987. Her remains were found in 1988 and Bender was asked by police to reconstruct her likeness. In 1990 Bender's bust was recognised as Rosella by a member of her family. In 2005 Brian Hall confessed to Rosella's murder; he was convicted in 2007.
Photograph of Rosella Atkinson, credited by the NYT to Frank Bender. |
Alamy: Frank Bender with his bust of Rosella Atkinson.
Alamy: Photo of the bust by Matt Rourke.
The Cinemaholic: Rosella Atkinson Murder: https://thecinemaholic.com/rosella-atkinson-murder-where-is-brian-hall-now/
Findagrave.com: Rosella Atkinson: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/216904155/rosella-atkinson
Bender's Wikipedia profile: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frank_Bender
"City"
Source: "Slaughter goes on in Syrian city", by Joel Taylor. Metro, 2 August 2011, Business Day Section, p.13. Text online: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/12-13/ |
The author's byline is visible beneath the headline, enabling a confident identification of the source of this cutting. The article covers the killing by the Syrian army of 120 anti-Assad protesters in the city of Hama.
"Bankruptcy Move"
Source: "Just Before Deadline, County in Alabama Delays Bankruptcy Move", by Mary Williams Walsh and Campbell Robertson. New York Times, Business Day section, 29 July 2011, p.1. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/29/business/economy/alabamas-jefferson-county-postpones-a-decision-on-bankruptcy.html (paywall) |
The article concerns the debt crisis in Jefferson County, Alabama. The accompanying photo, part of which can be seen on the clipping, is of Birmingham, Alabama:
Birmingham, Alabama. By Bob Farley for the New York Times |
Osprey
Source: "Jamaica Bay: Wilderness On the Edge", by Alan Feuer. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Metropolitan section, p.1. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/nyregion/jamaica-bay-a-wild-place-on-the-edge-of-change.html (paywall) |
Photo by Mylan Cannon for the New York Times |
"Is That All There Is?"
Source: "Is That All There Is? Milking Life For More", by A.O. Scott. New York Times, 29 July 2011, Weekend Arts section, p.1. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/29/movies/the-future-directed-by-miranda-july-review.html (paywall)
Source: "Is That All There Is? Milking Life For More", by A.O. Scott. New York Times, 29 July 2011, Weekend Arts section, p.1. Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/29/movies/the-future-directed-by-miranda-july-review.html (paywall)
Unidentified
The Final Cover Artwork
"U.S. To Chip In"
Source: "Obama Tells U.S to Chip In", The Sun, 3 August 2011, p.6. |
"Hero... And Zero"
Source: "Hero... And Zero", Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.58. |
Meggitt chief executive Terry Twigger, left, is flying the flag for British engineering exports with a 26pc increase in half-year profits to 6146.2m and looks all set to lead his company into the Footsie.Carpetright sales may not be quite as threadbare as they were but with shares still half the price they were four years ago investors are unlikely to be found cutting a rug in honour of boss Lord Harris of Peckham.
"Glee Turns to Gloom"
Source: "Glee turns to gloom", by Cheryl Latham. Metro, 2 August 2011, p.35. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/34-35/ |
"It's racist to bar me from your country!"
Source: "It's racist to bar me from your country!" by Sanjay Jha and David Williams. Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.9. Text online at: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2021670/Indian-Vali-Chapti-UK-migration-racism-row-insists-wont-learn-English.html |
The Mail tracks down Indian husband in human rights battle who says he won't learn English - and hopes 'many others' will join him in UK when he wins his case.
Rashida Chapti, Vali's wife, didn't win the case:
"English test for immigrants 'not illegal', judge rules." Daily Mirror.
Metro
Source: Metro, 2 August 2011, p.5. |
Unhappy Mario
Source: "Unhappy Mario reveals his Manchester misery", by Kevin Aitken. Metro, 2 August 2011, p.49. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/48-49 |
The Sun Says
The Sun, logo |
Source: "The Sun Says", The Sun, 3 August 2011, p.8. |
Vice Raid
Source: "My Forty Years as a Vice Prober", by Peter Carroll (as told to Theodore Irwin). Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.74. |
Photograph credited to Gib Brush/Kelpix |
Male cover I
Source: cover painting by Mel Crair. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955. |
Pugh
Source: "Longevity Down to Genes", cartoon by Pugh / "Having a long life 'is all down to inheriting the right genes'", by Fiona MacRae. Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.11. Text online at: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/health/article-2021767/Having-long-life-inheriting-right-genes.html |
This is the cartoon:
Source: https://mailpictures.newsprints.co.uk/18175009-longevity-genes-4_8_11jpg/ |
Sladon
I probably ought to be putting this into the "unidentified" category (I do count it that way in the statistics), except that there is a little information about the item.
The clipping is a photograph, and the credit visible on the side seems to be "V" - Vladimir - Sladon.
Another example of his work is here: https://www.taminoautographs.com/products/margot-fonteyn-valentina-peresyalavec-photograph.
English Cricket
Source: undetermined |
The image on this cutting is the symbol of the England and Wales cricket team/England and Wales Cricket Board.
Disgruntled Barton
Source: "Disgruntled Barton now told to get out of Toon", by Paul Murphy. Metro, 2 August 2011, p.47. Text online at: https://metro.co.ugod k/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/46-47 |
Tin Shop
Source: illustration by Elliott Means from the story, "I'm Going to Kill Hickok", by Seth Kantor. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.43 (article is pp.42-43, 46-47). |
A Moral Uprising
Source: "My Forty Years as a Vice Prober", by Peter Carroll (as told to Theodore Irwin) Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.13 |
A moral uprising closed the houses in the U.S., too, and drove the girls onto the streets near army camps.
"Play Guitar in 7 Days"
Source: "Play Guitar in 7 Days", Ed Sale advert. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.74. |
A second clipping from p.74 of the September 1955 issue of Male.
dressed in cowboy gear and billed himself as 'Radio’s Wizard of the Strings.' Sale had a regular radio broadcast (where is unknown), published methods, and sold Sale guitars, probably made for him at the old Oscar Schmidt plant in Jersey City.
Tea Tree Bay
Source: "South East Queensland" postcard. Photograph of Tea Tree Bay, Noosa National Park, Queensland, Australia, by Philip Rowley/Banksia Images Pty Ltd. (postcard found on ebay) |
Source: Banksia Images #Q128 |
Source: Banksia Images #Q223 |
Big Pay Day Price Crunch
Source: Morrisons "Big Pay Day Price Crunch" promotion. Example from Daily Mail, 29 July 2011, p.38. |
Unidentified
The Microsite "Original Cover"
This Old Republican
Source: "This Old Republican" by Brian McFadden. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.3. |
Colour version of the strip:
St David's School
Source: "Education Jobs: Saint David's School". New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.8.
Here's a bigger version of the advert:
Source: "Education Jobs: Saint David's School". New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.8. |
Here's a bigger version of the advert:
"Remember your training, Quigly..."
Source: "Remember your training, Quigly..." cartoon by Mac, Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.17. |
Here's a larger version of the cartoon:
"No Skinny Scare-Crow For Me!"
Source: "Gain More Weight", More-Wate Co. advert. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.61. |
"His father was a clown"
Source: "This Land: A Son Follows Giant Footsteps Into the Big Tent", by Dan Barry. New York Times, 29 July 2011, p.11. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/29/us/29land.html (paywall) |
Pay Cuts and Rate Rises
Source: "2 in 3 workers see pay cut or frozen", by Kirsty Walker / "Rate rise would cost families £500 a year", by Hugo Duncan. Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.17. Text online at: https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2021753/Paypackets-hit-economic-woe-2-3-workers-salaries-cut-frozen.html (Walker) and https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2021781/Rate-rise-cost-families-500-year-economists-warn.html (Duncan) |
Yet another clipping from p.17 of the 3 August 2011 issue of the Daily Mail.
"Four-Star Earthquake"
Source: "News Analysis: Turkish Military's 'Four-Star Earthquake' Reshapes Political Terrain", by Anthony Shadid. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.6. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/world/asia/31turkey.html (paywall) |
The clipping here is of the bottom left member of Turkey's High Military Council. Here's a colour version:
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, flanked by the members of the High Military Council at the mausoleum of Gen. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of Turkey, in Ankara in 2005. Mr. Erdogan has served for eight years.
Seven Terrified Women...
Source: "Seven Terrified Women... Cindy", The Dollar Mystery Guild advert. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.59. |
The text for the "Cindy" segment, an extract from the Joseph Hayes novel The Desperate Hours (1954), reads:
Cindy walked into her parents' darkened living room... and a drunken, bearded man in a prison uniform seized her, pawed her, bent her backward across a table. "Don't fight him, Cindy," begged her father, watching helplessly. Then Cindy saw the gun in the convict's hand... and ceased to struggle.
Wikipedia: The Desperate Hours (Hayes novel)
Low Prices
Source: "Low Prices on Family Favourites", Asda Stores advertisement. Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.23. |
"Afghans Rage at Young Lovers..."
Source: "Afghans Rage at Young Lovers; A Father Says Kill Them Both." by Jack Healy. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.1 (full article pp.1, 8). Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/world/asia/31herat.html (paywall). |
One of two clippings from this grim two page article that can be found in this version of the cover artwork.
Song Poems
Source: "Song Poems Wanted: To Be Set to Music", Five Star Music Masters advert. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.78. |
The advert reads:
SONG POEMS WANTED - TO BE SET TO MUSICSubmit one of your best poems for free examination. Any subject. Send poem for details and information.Phonograph Records MadeFIVE STAR MUSIC MASTERS, 442 BEACON BLDG, BOSTON, MASS.
Wempe Zeitmeister
Source: Wempe Automatic XL Aviator Watch advert. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.3. |
Wempe were regular advertisers, so as usual I've picked from an edition of the New York Times we know is a source of other clippings.
Rocks Like Nothing Else
Source: "Rocks Like Nothing Else." HP TouchPad advert. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.11. |
Here's a colour version of a similar Hewlett Packard advert:
Out of the Underworld...
Source: "Inside For Men: Out of the Underworld". Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.34. |
The cutting is taken from a cartoon illustrating an item about mugging.
Have a Laugh!
No More Fish in the Sea?
Credit: Andrew Meredith. Source: https://www.zsl.org/what-we-do/projects/project-ocean |
The clipped image looks like it might be this:
Source: https://www.selfridges.com/GB/en/features/project-earth/our-sustainability-legacy/ |
Source: "We love: Project Ocean at Selfridges", by Amy Mountstephens. Metro, 5 May 2011, p.21. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-05-05/mta/spread/20-21 |
"Mirror, Mirror on the Wall..."
Source: "Mirror, mirror on the wall...", by Bob Barnes. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.77. |
Float Above It All
Source: "Float Above It All", advert for Frontgate. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.10. |
Frontgate: company profile
Taylor Guitars Grand Auditorium
Source: "J&R 40th Anniversary", advert for Taylor Guitars Grand Auditorium - Acoustic-Electric Guitar. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Arts & Leisure section, p.22. |
Here's a larger image of the part of the advert from which the clipping was taken:
Sky Watch II
Source: "Sky Watch: Week of July 31", New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.18. |
"Hands Tied?"
Source: "Hands Tied?", American School advert. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.76. |
Source: Booth Library Postcard Collection, Eastern Illinois University, via CARLI Digital Collections [Link] |
The American School was founded in 1897. It is now located in a suburb of Chicago called Lansing.
Mail Classifieds: Flights & Overseas Holidays
Source: "Mail Classifieds: Flights & Overseas Holidays". Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.54. |
"Anger as Singer Wears Fox Skin"
Source: "Anger as Singer Wears Fox Skin: J-Lo's Furry Fury Coat", by Pete Samson. The Sun, 3 August 2011, p.7. |
Self-explanatory, I think.
New York Times, Sunday 31 July 2011
Source: New York Times, 31 July 2011 |
"What's in a Face at 50?"
Source: "What's in a Face at 50?" by Denise Grady. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.4. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/sunday-review/whats-in-a-face-at-50.html (paywall) |
Debt Deal
Source: "Nervous wait for vote on 11th-hour debt deal", by John Higginson and Fred Attewill. The Metro, 2 August 2011, p.5. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/4-5 |
Fuel Economy Standards
Source: "Carmakers Back Strict New Rules on Gas Mileage by 2025", by Bill Vlasic. New York Times, 29 July 2011, p.3 (full article pp.1,3). Text online: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/29/business/carmakers-back-strict-new-rules-for-gas-mileage.html (paywall) |
The Miracle of New Hair
Source: "I Photograph the Miracle of New Hair Growing on Bald Heads!", Carl Brandenfels advert. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.51. |
"He Didn't Fake the Snake Scene"
Source: "He Didn't Fake the Snake Scene", by C. Ray Stahl. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.52 (article pp.18-21, 52, 54) |
"The Windscreen Viper"
Source: "The Windscreen Viper", by Fred Attewill. The Metro, 2 August 2011, p.19. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/18-19 |
This is the moment a family came face to face with a snake - after it suddenly slithered on to their car windscreen at 65mphThe 1.2m (4ft) viper emerged from the engine and wrapped itself around the wipers as 'freaked out' driver Rachel Fisher, 26, was filmed repeatedly shrieking: 'Oh my God.' Husband Tony, 29, who shot the footage on his phone, can be heard saying, 'I want it to fall off', and, 'It scares me' as he worries whether it can get into the car and harm their children babbling on the back seat.The YouTube hit was filmed on a highway in Memphis, Tennessee, after the Fishers probably picked up their unwanted passenger during an overnight stop in a wood.It eventually fell off when the car slowed as it hit traffic.
In Front of Oslo Cathedral
Source: "In Norway, Consensus Cuts 2 Ways: Debating the Impact of Modern Diversity", by Steven Erlanger and Michael Schwirtz. New York Times, 29 July 2011, p.9 (article, pp.4, 9). Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/29/world/europe/29norway.html (paywall) |
"Why Men Sphinx They're All Kings"
Source: "Why Men Sphinx They're All Kings". The Metro, 2 August 2011, p.5. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/4-5/ |
Text of the article reads:
Up to 70 per cent of British Men are related to the Egyptian pharaoh Tutankhamun, scientists claim. They and more than half of all western European males belong to the same genetic group as the boy king who ruled Egypt more than 3,000 years ago, say geneticists who reconstructed his DNA profile. The Swiss team is now searching for the closest living relatives of King Tut, whose common ancestor probably originated in the Caucasus about 9,500 years ago.
Male Cover II
Source: cover painting by Mel Crair. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955. |
A second detail from the cover of Male to appear in the Ersatz GB designs (a different detail would make it onto the final cover artwork, see above).
"Curfew, Tag and Web Ban for Hack Suspect"
Source: "Curfew, Tag and Web Ban for Hack Suspect", by Hayden Smith. The Metro, 2 August 2011, p.9. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/8-9 |
The article is about Jake Davis, AKA "Topiary", accused of various computing offences.
John A. Boehner
Source: Photograph of John A. Boehner by Stephen Crowley, New York Times, 29 July 2011, p.1 |
John A. Boehner, the House speaker, flanked by fellow Republican leaders, urged members of his party Thursday to pass his bill. A vote was later postponed when it seemed short of support.
Kill Hickok
Source: illustration by Elliott Means from the story, "I'm Going to Kill Hickok", by Seth Kantor. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.43 (article is pp.42-43, 46-47). |
Citibank Baby
Source: Citibank advert. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.1. Available online at: https://archive.nytimes.com/www.nytimes.com/indexes/2011/07/31/todayspaper/index.html |
The text reads, "We had a due date. So Citibank made sure we met our closing date."
Bingo
Source: "Kate's Given Up Bingeing for, er, Bingo", by Andrei Harmsworth. The Metro, 2 August 2011, p.24. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/24-25 |
Gossip. "Kate", meaning Kate Moss.
The Trial
Source: "Doctor 'Threatened to Kill' Wife Who Sent Him a Text Meant for Lover", by Jaya Narain. Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.23. |
"The Rise of the Macro-Nationalists"
Source: "The Rise of the Macro-Nationalists", by Thomas Hegghammer. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.5. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/opinion/sunday/the-rise-of-the-macro-nationalists.html (paywall) |
From the article:
At first glance, the 1,500-page manifesto of Anders Behring Breivik, the man accused of the terrorist attacks in Oslo, appears to be a fairly standard ideological treatise of the far right. The document, which Mr. Breivik posted online on July 22 just hours before the attacks and which he titled “2083 — A European Declaration of Independence,” evokes several of the movement’s central themes and cites numerous right-wing ideologues.On closer inspection, however, Mr. Breivik’s worldview does not fit squarely into any of the established categories of right-wing ideology, like white supremacism, ultranationalism or Christian fundamentalism. Rather, it reveals a new doctrine of civilizational war that represents the closest thing yet to a Christian version of Al Qaeda.
Mr. Breivik and Al Qaeda are manifestations of the same generic ideological phenomenon: “macro-nationalism,” a variant of nationalism applied to clusters of nation-states held together by a notion of shared identity, like “the West” or the “ummah.”
A Norwegian girl drew a heart on a mural for victims of the attacks on July 22 in Oslo.
Ritzy Bryan
Source: "Ritzy Bryan", by Kate Murphy. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.2. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/opinion/sunday/ritzy-bryan-on-whats-interesting.html (paywall) |
A profile of Ritzy Bryan, lead singer of The Joy Formidable.
The Bike Deal
Source: "Opinion: Reading and Its Rewards", by Maile Meloy. New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.9. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/opinion/sunday/reading-and-its-rewards.html (paywall) |
From the article:
When I was 10, growing up in Montana, I wanted a 10-speed bicycle, and my father made me a deal. I could have a new bike if I read 10 classic novels and wrote reports on then.
The illustration:
Credit: Julia Kuo |
Powerhouse Binoculars
Source: Thoresen's Powerhouse Binoculars advertisement. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.81. |
America's Future in Space
Source: Image by Valero Doval, illustrating "Sunday Dialogue: America's Future in Space". New York Times, 31 July 2011, Sunday Review section, p.2. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/opinion/sunday/sunday-dialogue-americas-future-in-space.html |
Complete image in colour:
"7 Terrific Mysteries"
Source: "Seven Terrified Women...", The Dollar Mystery Guild advert. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.59. |
A second clipping taken from this page of Male.
Bediquette
Source: "Bed Manners / Better Bed Manners", Arden Book Co. advert. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.77. |
From the advert:
Men and women are "Bed Animals", say the authors and they proceed to prove it with the friskiest discussion of nighttime intimacies you will ever read! This is a book full of roguish, frolicsome wit that will keep you laughing from cover to cover. For the strangest adventure of all is to find yourself locked in a bedroom with someone of the opposite sex with whom you are required to go to bed and get up for thousands of nights... it’s called marriage. It may have just happened to you or it may happen when you least expect it and are least prepared. But whatever your marital state, you’ll want to send for this hilarious book of Bediquette. today!
Paul Daniels' Teeth
Source: "Sooty and Weep: Paul Daniels in Hospital After Puppet Throws a Pizza at Him", by Jen Blackburn. The Sun, 3 August 2011, p.9. |
A second cutting from this particular article.
... Put a Cork in It?
Source: ReallyTV Channel advert. The Metro, 2 August 2011, p.31. Text online at: https://metro.co.uk/newspaper-daily-edition/2011-08-02/mta/spread/30-31 |
"Become an Expert in Traffic"
Source: "Become an Expert in Traffic", Lasalle Extension University advertisement. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.64. |
Time to Fuck
Source: unknown. |
"Be Popular!"
Source: "Be Popular! In Any Company - Anywhere!" Pickwick Co. advertisement. Male, Vol. 5 (9), September 1955, p.58. |
"Man of the (Fine) Cloth"
Source: "Man of the (Fine) Cloth" by Michael Brendan Dougherty. The New York Times Magazine, 31 July 2011, p.14. Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/magazine/you-are-here-money-cometh-to-me-now.html (paywall) |
"A Young Tibetan's Burden"
Source: Photograph of Ogyen Trinley Dorje by Librado Romero, New York Times, 29 July 2011, p.1. |
A YOUNG TIBETAN'S BURDEN.
Many Tibetans expect this man to be their leader. That's pressure.
International
Source: "International" page heading, New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.6. |
I've assumed that this clipping comes from the most commonly used edition of the NYT.
"A Very Flawed Hero"
Source: "A Very Flawed Hero", by Tony Rennell. Daily Mail, 3 August 2011, p.21. |
Afghans Rage II
Source: "Afghans Rage at Young Lovers; A Father Says Kill Them Both." by Jack Healy. New York Times, 31 July 2011, p.8 (full article pp.1, 8). Text online at: https://www.nytimes.com/2011/07/31/world/asia/31herat.html (paywall). |