Product sold by meremart.com. On Edward Gorey’s birthday, revisit Joan Acocella on the halting feeling of opening a Gorey volume on a winter afternoon. ampootozote@aol.com ... Edward Gorey Christmas Cover for the New Yorker; Gorey for the New Yorker. New 2016 Calendars: The New Yorker and Edward Gorey The new wall calendars for 2016 have arrived. Stay safe and healthy. He was the creator of The Gashlycrumb Tinies, a gruesomely comic alphabet, as well as several other independent illustrated books such as The Doubtful Guest, The Hapless Child and The Unstrung Harp. The expert: Christine von der Linn, specialist in art books and original illustration at Swann Auction Galleries. All prints are professionally printed, packaged, and shipped within 3 - 4 business days. Shipped with USPS First Class Package. They are probably on sale just about everywhere by now but I came across them over the weekend at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Update: The Edward Gorey Cat Fancy cover illustration for The New Yorker sold for $16,250. New Yorker Cover The December 10, 2018 issue of the New Yorker magazine featured a previously unknown drawing by Edward Gorey on its cover. Swann Galleries’ sale of Illustration Art on Tuesday, December 10 featured an array of original works, from well-known characters of children’s literature to striking New Yorker covers and theater designs. I welcome all discussions, questions, comments and corrections to the information posted. Cats in Illustration: The New Yorker Cat Feast Cover, 1973 by v. New Yorker February 1973 Art Print by Ronald Searle. What you see: Cat Fancy, a cover illustration created for The New Yorker magazine by the late Edward Gorey. This is a spot where I post photos and personal observations on pieces from my Edward Gorey collection. If the artist and writer Edward Gorey were still alive in the conventional sense, he’d be turning ninety on February 22. Gorey for the New Yorker. The New Yorker Cover - February 1973 Regular Giclee Print par Ronald Searle sur AllPosters. He was born one day after The New Yorker magazine (and its iconic dandy, Eustace Tilley). If you are interested in purchasing a Numbered edition print, or have any questions regarding them; Please contact The Edward Gorey House: His characteristic pen-and-ink drawings often depict vaguely unsettling narrative scenes in Victorian and Edwardian settings. The New Yorker, December 21 1992 | $11.90. No markings or tears. Agatha Christie would turn 35 in September; Hercule Poirot had been detecting for five years, and Miss Marple debuted two years later. Additional insights and information can be found in Amy Benfer, “Edward Gorey” in the online Salon.com’s Brilliant Careers, and in Edmund Wilson, “The Albums of Edward Gorey,” The New Yorker, 26 Dec. 1959. The auction was a success, with seven of the top 20 lots ultimately acquired by institutions.