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Ohio State University logo University Libraries arrow Cartoon Research Library
Cartoon Research Library
Untitled Document
Korean Comics:A Society through Small Frames
Sugar & Spice: Little Girls in the Funnies
A Tale of the Jungle Imps by Felix Fiddle
Drawn on Stone: Political Prints from the 1830s and 1840s
Kate Salley Palmer: Born to Cartoon
The Yellow Kid: Hero of Hogan's Alley
The Sting of The Wasp
Dreams of the Rarebit Fiend
Humor in a Jugular Vein: A Selection of the Art and Artifacts of MAD Magazine
Hoo-Boy! Morrie Brickman’s The Small Society
Cartoons by Leland S. McClelland: A Retrospective Exhibition
Cartooning AIDS Around the World
Jewish Cartoonists and the American Experience
Paul Palnik: The Fine Art of the Cartoon from Generation to Generation
Seventy-fifth Birthday of Barney Google and Snuffy Smith
Bill Crawford: A Retrospective Exhibition
A Tribute to Milton Caniff
Untitled Document
September 22 - December 31
Sam Milai
of the Pittsburgh Courier

 

Anne Mergen:  Editorial Cartoonist
LibraryFebruary 1 – April 11, 2008

Anne Mergen’s editorial cartoons chronicle history from the Great Depression through the Cold War.  During that time, she was the only woman in the nation working as an editorial cartoonist.

Mergen was born in Omaha, Nebraska, in 1906.  She studied commercial art in Chicago before moving to Miami in the mid 1920s to work as a fashion advertising artist for a local department store.  When the Miami Daily News, part of the Cox newspaper chain, hired her as its editorial cartoonist in 1933, she was the only woman editorial cartoonist in the United States, a status that continued until her retirement in 1956.  She continued to have cartoons published as late as 1959. 

She had a home studio and all of the contemporary press coverage about her career celebrates the fact that she drew her editorial cartoons only after fulfilling her duties as wife and mother to two children.   In addition to being published in the Miami Daily News, her cartoons were published in other Cox newspapers including the Atlanta Journal and the Dayton News.

The editorial cartoons in this exhibit range from Mergen’s take on Goebbels’ propaganda to the advent of nuclear power.  She was a thoughtful commentator on the events of her time and her work merits wider recognition.

Anne Mergen died in 1994.  The cartoons in this exhibition were donated to the Cartoon Research Library by her grandchildren, Matthew Bernhardt and Christine Hoverman.  The Anne Mergen Collection at the Cartoon Research Library contains almost 600 original editorial cartoons documenting her work.  This exhibit is free and open to the public.