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Daydreams and Nightmares by Winsor McCay
Daydreams and Nightmares by Winsor McCay





Daydreams and Nightmares by Winsor McCay Daydreams and Nightmares by Winsor McCay

  • Midsummer Daydreams and Other Comic Strips (1904-1925)Įven early on in McCay’s career, we can see evidence of his imagining alternative universes and possible worlds through a series of cartoons depicting historical figures living in modern times.
  • Daydreams and Nightmares by Winsor McCay

  • Newspaper Fantasy Illustrations (1903-1912).
  • I saved one of the best for last, “The Children of Ignorance,” which I have used several times online throughout the years.Winsor McCay (1869?-1934) is best known for Little Nemo in Slumberland (1905-1914, 1924-1927), a magnum opus by virtually any cartooning standard, and Gertie the Dinosaur (1909), acknowledged as one of the first great animated cartoons of his and any era.ĭaydreams and Nightmares: The Fantastic Visions of Winsor McCay, 1898-1934 edited by Richard Marschall (Fantagraphics, 2005) features McCay’s additional contributions, with chapters on:

    Daydreams and Nightmares by Winsor McCay

    And many more, too: his political cartoons show that he was deeply opposed to war on principle, a view I tend to support he hated drugs (and mind you, he was illustrating from the late 1800s to the 1930s) he was serious about Christianity, a theme that came up now and then in his work there’s one that shows he was deeply disturbed about “The White Slaver,” with a caption reading, “The most sinister and degraded member of the race! The shame of civilization!” he has illustrations on the importance of taking life seriously in the face of death at least two about women’s rights several visions of a fascinating (often incorrect) future and one against “technocracy,” portrayed as a futuristic machine-monster, which seems newly relevant in the age of Big Tech. I found that most if not all of his values were my values, and indeed, the words are right in the images: things like thought, knowledge, truth, hard work, duty, wisdom, books. What has always struck me about McCay, aside from his sheer skill as an illustrator, is his ability to express important values in a striking and beautiful way. I learned about McCay while browsing through books in the 1990s, I think it was, in a shop in Seattle’s Fish Market, and I just stumbled upon a collection of his work titled Daydreams and Nightmares, which has many (not all) of the items below. My favorite illustrator ever, Winsor McCay (1869-1934), worked for decades as a newspaper political cartoonist, illustrator, and animator.







    Daydreams and Nightmares by Winsor McCay