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        Images of 
          Uncle Sam
 Uncle Sam as an invented brand character for America has a great visual 
        charm - half billboard, half huckster. Rather like a British policeman 
        in the traditional domed headwear, it is impossible to be utterly browbeaten 
        by this level of sartorial vulgarity and implausibility of decoration. 
        Oddly, the goatee became associated in America in the fifties with untrustworthy 
        Europeans, usually in the guise of the evil scientist. The image of Trotsky 
        was perhaps not far behind. It 
        is an interesting experiment to compare the respective costumes and facial 
        hair sported by the Sams below.
 01 December 
        1951, and my own favourite. This is an advertisement for The Advertising 
        Council, recalling the industry's contribution to the War Effort in the 
        "first dark days of World War II". 19 x 23cms, and as banale 
        an image as you could get, featuring a national personification greeting 
        the respected face of business. This almost plumbs the depths of PUNCH 
        cartoons where France and Belgium weep over a Turkey. There are, however, 
        for the discerning analyst, some interesting variants - in the rather 
        too affectionate double handshake which, because of the badly drawn arm, 
        looks like Sam is trying to extract something from the sleeve of Business 
        Leader. Would you trust your new dynamic advertising campaign to an elderly 
        cove who came out without his teeth and needs to steady himself with his 
        left arm on his desk which is, curiously, bare ? He leaves the impression 
        of somebody who is grateful to be called because there's not a lot going 
        on in his life. The use of Brown Trousers on Sam is a cardinal error. 
        The Advertising Council should be the first ones to realise that you have 
        to maintain consistency of colour in branding.    02 Herblock's 
        image of concerned Sam, Washington Post 1951, From The Herblock Book, 
        Beacon Books, Boston 1952.  03 Armed 
        Forces recruitment from Okonite October 1948, US Army and Airforce Recruitment, 
        "This is not a time of war. Yet seldom before except in wartime has 
        America been threatened with graver danger than today. " Using the 
        celebrated and jagged image by James Montgomery Flagg as a basis but without 
        the teethgrinding and interrogation. June 1943, 14 x 23cms. Issued by 
        the Mead Corporations, papermakers to America. Very much the huckster 
        with a grim face shrouded in darkness with an innacurate thumb over the 
        shoulder , more lift-seeking than directional. Signed "Gough". 
         04 US Savings 
        Bonds c1947 05 Uncle Sam on his knees ? "not beaten there by the hammer and sickle 
        but FREELY, INTELLIGENTLY, RESPONSIBLY, CONFIDEMNTLY, POWERFULLY. America 
        knows it can destroy communism & win the battle for peace. We need 
        fear nothing or no one.... except GOD." And who brings us this stuff 
        ? The Hilton Hotel Chain , that's who - detail from the ad JULY 1952 14 
        X 27cs
 06 June 1964, issued by the vigorously anti-Socialist Investor owned Electric 
        Light and Power Companies . 18 x 20cms. "The people who wrote our 
        Constitution decided that the Federal Government should not be a Great 
        father. In fact they restricted Uncle Sam's role rather strictly, to assure 
        freedom and opportunity for individuals." Now, how would you describe 
        Sam's expression. I think it's distinctly RUEFUL . Sam would love to be 
        Father to the Nation, (like Papa Doc of Haiti) but realises that the Power 
        companies are lit, day and night, to stop it. Hence Sam cannot here be 
        called a personification of the Nation - more a potential enemy.
 07 March 1941, and reproduced for you on such a scale that you'll lose 
        sleep for a week. Here, Sam, who tends to the shifty, has got stern, with 
        a terrific musculature. He positively bristles with stars, not to mention 
        stripes and his head of hair is more Mosaic than is usual on American 
        heroes. Signed "Arthur Smith" and a good drawing it is too. 
        Slightly vulgar on the hallation, but you can't have everything 11 x 15cms.
 
        
          
             THOMAS NAST
     
 cartoon caricature
 
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