Photograph of Wanda Gág at the age of about three, c.1896.

Wanda Gág as a child

Photograph of Wanda Gág at the age of about three, c.1896.

Photograph of Wanda Gág in 1928.

Wanda Gág

Photograph of Wanda Gág in 1928.

Gág, Wanda (1893–1946)

Wanda Gág was determined to be an artist from an early age, and ultimately she succeeded. Her talent steered her through family hardship and hesitant early artistic efforts until she created Millions of Cats, her 1928 children's book. It has never been out of print.

Color photograph of the Hotel Del Otero, c.1906

Hotel Del Otero, Lake Minnetonka

Color photograph of the Hotel Del Otero, c.1906

Color postcard of the Hotel Keewaydin, c.1910.

Hotel Keewaydin, Lake Minnetonka

Color postcard of the Hotel Keewaydin, c.1910.

Color postcard of the Dancing Pavilion at the Hotel Del Otero, c.1910.

Dancing Pavilion, Hotel del Otero, Spring Park, Lake Minnetonka

Color postcard of the Dancing Pavilion at the Hotel Del Otero, c.1910.

Photograph of an office of the Northwestern Express Company, the reorganized Minnesota Stage Company, in Deadwood, South Dakota, c.1880.

Northwestern Express Company

Photograph of an office of the Northwestern Express Company, the reorganized Minnesota Stage Company, in Deadwood, South Dakota, c.1880.

Portrait of James C. Burbank, a founding member of the Minnesota Stage Company, c.1872.

James C. Burbank

Portrait of James C. Burbank, a founding member of the Minnesota Stage Company, c.1872.

Front cover of the July 1922 issue of <em>Captain Billy's Whiz Bang</em>.

Captain Billy's Whiz Bang, July 1922

Front cover of the July 1922 issue of Captain Billy's Whiz Bang.

Captain Billy's Whiz Bang

Captain Billy's Whiz Bang was one of the most popular and notorious humor magazines of the 1920s. It was created by Wilford Hamilton Fawcett, who had been a captain in the U.S. Army during World War I and gained the nickname Captain Billy. Fawcett would later tell reporters that he had started his magazine to give the doughboys—as World War I servicemen were popularly called—something to laugh about.

Pages

Subscribe to RSS - Arts