Art Young
American illustrator and author, 1866–1943
Young furthered his studies at the Art Students League of New York, the Academie Julian in Paris, and Cooper Union. He worked for a number of magazines and papers such as Chicago Inter-Ocean, Puck, Judge, Life, and the New York evening Journal.
Young is best known as a cartoonist, co-editor, and contributer for the radical socialist monthly called The Masses. He worked there from 1911 until 1918. Young came into legal trouble for this magazine and in 1917 was charged along with several other contributers under the Espoinage Act for "conspiracy to obstruct enlistment." The first trial ended in a hung jury and the second in an acquittal. Young became a comic figure in both trials, often falling asleep or making jokes during the prosecution's arguments.
Person TypeIndividual
Terms
- artists
- male
American illustrator, 1875–1954
American etcher, lecturer, and writer 1863–1941
American painter and printmaker, 1834–1903
American cartoonist, 1898–1960
American artist and illustrator, 1862–1936
French printmaker, 1821–1868, of English parentage
British Pre-Raphaelite painter, 1828–1882
Scottish painter, draftsman, and etcher, 1892–1963
American illustrator, 1874–1925