Richard Taylor
Born1902
Died1970
Bethel, Connecticut, United States
NationalityCanadian
Other namesRic
OccupationCartoonist
Known forCartoons in The New Yorker

Richard Taylor (1902–1970) was a Canadian cartoonist best known for his cartoons in the magazine The New Yorker and in Playboy. He signed his work R.Taylor. Canadian comics historian John Bell called Taylor "one of the greatest New Yorker cartoonists".[1]

Taylor was born in 1902 in Fort William, Ontario, in Canada.[2] In the 1920s, he contributed to Toronto-based publications; he contributed for a year to Toronto Telegram newspaper,[3] from 1927 to the University of Toronto's humour magazine The Goblin,[4] and the Communist Party of Canada newspaper The Worker.[1] Aside from cartooning, he produced commercial art and in his spare time painted.[4] In 1935, The New Yorker began publishing his work, and he thereafter moved to the United States, where there were more opportunities for better pay for cartoonists. He married Maxine MacTavish in Toronto, Ontario and they had no children[3] Taylor died in West Redding, Connecticut, in the United States in 1970 of prostate cancer.[2] The National Gallery of Canada has been gifted the vast majority of his lifetime's works.

References

Works cited

  • Bell, John (2006). Invaders from the North: How Canada Conquered the Comic Book Universe. Toronto: Dundurn Press. ISBN 978-1-55002-659-7.
  • Current Biography staff (1941). "Richard Thompson". Current Biography. H. W. Wilson Company. p. 854.
  • Lerner, Loren R.; Williamson, Mary F. (1991). Art and architecture in Canada: a bibliography and guide to the literature to 1981. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-5856-0.
  • Mouly, Françoise; Weschler, Lawrence (2000). Covering the New Yorker: cutting-edge covers from a literary institution. Abbeville Press. ISBN 9780789206572.

Further reading


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