"The fools," cried Mr. Hesekiah Hoyt...

© SEPS: Curtis Publishing, Indianapolis, IN. Photograph and digital image © Delaware Art Museum…
© SEPS: Curtis Publishing, Indianapolis, IN.
"The fools," cried Mr. Hesekiah Hoyt...
© SEPS: Curtis Publishing, Indianapolis, IN. Photograph and digital image © Delaware Art Museum. Not for reproduction or publication.

"The fools," cried Mr. Hesekiah Hoyt...

Date1939
Artist (American artist, 1884–1969)
Illustration Citation"Who's running this sales department, anyway?," by William Hazlett Upson, in The Saturday Evening Post, April 29, 1939
MediumInk and gouache on paper
Dimensionscomposition (left): 18 1/2 × 16 in. (47 × 40.6 cm)
composition (right): 7 1/2 × 11 in. (19.1 × 27.9 cm)
sheet: 24 1/2 × 39 in. (62.2 × 99.1 cm)
Credit LineGift of F. Marsden and Zenna Mae London, 1988
Object number1988-95
On View
Not on view
ClassificationsDRAWING
Label TextThis drawing illustrated a story about the misadventures of two traveling salesmen. Earle Winslow suggests their frantic life with dramatic gestures, the long swerving road, and vigorous steam from the industrial machinery.

A native of Michigan, Earle Winslow trained at the Art Institute of Chicago and the Detroit School of Fine Arts. By 1919, he was living in New York, where he studied at the Art Students League with George Bellows and John Sloan. He worked as a cartoonist until 1924, when he opened his studio. His illustrations appeared in popular magazines, in advertisements, and on posters for US government programs. In his later years, he taught art at Pratt Institute.