Frank Ver Beck Explained

William Francis Ver Beck (June 1, 1858 – July 13, 1933)[1] was an American illustrator known for his comedic drawings of animals.[2]

Biography

Ver Beck was born in Richland Township, Belmont County, Ohio as the son of a shoemaker. He studied art and woodcarving under Mansfield, Ohio artist Robert R. "Railroad" Smith and worked as a wood engraver.[1]

In 1881 or 1882, Ver Beck moved to New York City. There he studied art and became a freelance illustrator for magazines including Scribner's, The Ladies Home Journal, and Collier's.[1]

In 1894 in Munsey's Magazine, Harold Payne wrote:

For quaintness of conceit and weirdness of treatment William Francis Ver Beck has no parallel. His specialty is in making animals, and particularly reptiles, to represent human beings in comical situations. He invests crocodiles, turtles, lizards, frogs, and other amphibiae with human attributes, places them in all sorts of ludicrous positions, and carries them through endless laughable experiences. He even descends to the vegetable kingdom for his subjects, and invests cabbages, carrots, and beets with the power of lingual communication. Indeed, Ver Beck might well be designated as the artistic Aesop of the time.[3]

Ver Beck was one of author Stephen Crane's first friends in New York City.[4] One winter evening Crane and British artist Phil May borrowed a tiger skin belonging to Ver Beck and were arrested walking huddled under the skin on Broadway in the early morning hours. They were released but the policeman kept the tiger skin.[5] Also in New York City, in 1895 Ver Beck witnessed the shooting of Solomon Mann by David Hannigan and testified in Hannigan's trial.[6]

Shortly before World War I, Ver Beck moved to England.[1] In 1913 he was working in St Ives, Cornwall with his wife, the American-born artist and writer Hanna Rion, (1875—1924). Their relationship ended and she remarried in 1921.[7] He died at the age of 75 in Essex.[1]

Published books

Ver Beck's Little Story Books:

Another Bear Book

Wee Books for Wee Folks. These were all reprinted later by The Platt & Munk Co. Inc., New York:

Later Books

External links

Note: as of 2016-07-01, LC Online Catalog search for 'frank verbeck' (no space) hits at least 10 more records for Frank Ver Beck.

Notes and References

  1. Book: Mary Sayre Haverstock . Jeannette Mahoney Vance . Brian L. Meggitt . Artists in Ohio, 1787-1900: a biographical dictionary . 2000 . Kent State University Press . 978-0-87338-616-6 . 890.
  2. News: W. Francis Ver Beck, Illustrator, Dies: Author of Books for Children for Which He Provided Drawings - Collaborated With Paine. . The New York Times . August 1, 1933 . 17.
  3. Book: https://books.google.com/books?id=TZHNAAAAMAAJ&pg=PP9 . Munsey's Magazine . The Frank A. Munsey company . 1 September 2011 . Harold Payne . 1894 . 10 . 549 . Our Caricaturists and Cartoonists.
  4. Book: Stanley Wertheim. A Stephen Crane encyclopedia. 1 September 2011. 1997. Greenwood Publishing Group. 978-0-313-29692-5. 350.
  5. Book: Badge of Courage: The Life of Stephen Crane . registration . Houghton Mifflin . Davis, Linda H. . 1998 . Boston . 56–57.
  6. News: In Favor of Hannigan: Witnesses Think That He Acted in an Irrational Way . The New York Times . November 5, 1895 . August 31, 2011 . 16.
  7. Web site: William Francis VER BECK . West Cornwall Art Archive . Cornwall Artists Index . September 1, 2011.
  8. Web site: Notable Hallocks.
  9. Book: Beasts and birds of America, Europe, Asia and Africa. January 1870. American Tract Society.
  10. From an ABE Books listing from Books-n-Things (New Philadelphia, OH, U.S.A.):Title: BEASTS AND BIRDS OF AFRICAPublisher: The American Tract Society, New York, NYPublication Date: 1870Binding: Hardcover
  11. Web site: Image 309 of Zig-zag, the boy conjurer; or, Life on and off stage. Library of Congress.
  12. The Publishers' Weekly. Volume 88, Nov. 20, 1915