teach-or-trav - Teach_or_Trav
Teach_or_Trav

Artist and Music Producer out da Bronx, NYhttps://linktr.ee/teach_or_trav.

490 posts

Jackie Ormes, The First Black American Woman Cartoonist

Jackie Ormes, The First Black American Woman Cartoonist
Jackie Ormes, The First Black American Woman Cartoonist
Jackie Ormes, The First Black American Woman Cartoonist
Jackie Ormes, The First Black American Woman Cartoonist
Jackie Ormes, The First Black American Woman Cartoonist
Jackie Ormes, The First Black American Woman Cartoonist
Jackie Ormes, The First Black American Woman Cartoonist

Jackie Ormes, the first Black American woman cartoonist

When the 14-year-old Black American boy Emmett Till was lynched in 1955, one cartoonist responded in a single-panel comic. It showed one Black girl telling another: “I don’t want to seem touchy on the subject… but that new little white tea-kettle just whistled at me!”

It may not seem radical today, but penning such a political cartoon was a bold and brave statement for its time — especially for the artist who was behind it. This cartoon was drawn by Jackie Ormes, the first syndicated Black American woman cartoonist to be published in a newspaper. Ormes, who grew up in Pittsburgh, got her first break as cartoonist as a teenager. She started working for the Pittsburgh Courier as a sports reporter, then editor, then cartoonist who penned her first comic, Torchy Brown in Dixie to Harlem, in 1937. It followed a Mississippi teen who becomes a famous singer at the famed Harlem jazz club, The Cotton Club.

In 1942, Ormes moved to Chicago, where she drew her most popular cartoon, Patty-Jo ‘n’ Ginger, which followed two sisters who made sharp political commentary on Black American life. 

In 1947, Ormes created the Patty-Jo doll, the first Black doll that wasn’t a mammy doll or a Topsy-Turvy doll. In production for a decade, it was a role model for young black girls. "The doll was a fashionable, beautiful character,“ says Daniel Schulman, who curated one of the dolls into a recent Chicago exhibition. “It had an extraordinary presence and power — they’re collected today and have important place in American doll-making in the U.S.”

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In 1950, Ormes drew her final strip, Torchy in Heartbeats, which followed an independent, stylish black woman on the quest for love — who commented on racism in the South. “Torchy was adventurous, we never saw that with an Black American female figure,” says Beauchamp-Byrd. “And remember, this is the 1950s." Ormes was the first to portray black women as intellectual and socially-aware in a time when they were depicted in a derogatory way.

One common mistake that erased Ormes from history is mis-crediting Barbara Brandon-Croft as the first nationally syndicated Black American female cartoonist. "I’m just the first mainstream cartoonist, I’m not the first at all,” says Brandon-Croft, who published her cartoons in the Detroit Free Press in the 1990s. “So much of Black history has been ignored, it’s a reminder that Black history shouldn’t just be celebrated in February.”

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1 year ago
Digital illustration of the Addams family. On the left, a dark-skinned Morticia with long thick hair stands next to Gomez, who has brown skin and short dark curly hair. Wednesday and Pugsley stand in front of them. Wednesday has brown skin and long dark hair, divided into four thick braids. She holds a headless doll in her hand. Pugsley had four very short braids and smiles, his hands behind his back. All of them face forward, dressed in black with white accents and posed for a family portrait against a faded yellow-green background.
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For the goths and ghouls 🥀 An old one from Blacktober 2020 I know people really enjoyed. :-)

Prints available below for those interested:

Addams Family | Lurch | Cousin Itt