Rudolph Dirks
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Rudolph Dirks (February 26, 1877 – April 20, 1968) was one of the earliest and most noted comic strip artists.
Dirks was born in Heide, Germany to Johannes and Margaretha Dirks[1]. When he was seven years old, his father, a woodcarver, moved the family to Chicago, Illinois. His older brother, Gus Dirks, moved to New York City and found work as a cartoonist. Rudolph soon followed his brother's example (Gus assisted his brother with The Katzenjammer Kids during the first few years, until his suicide in 1902). He held several jobs as an illustrator, culminating in a position with William Randolph Hearst's New York Journal.
The circulation war between the Journal and Joseph Pulitzer's New York World was raging. The World had a huge success with the full-color Sunday feature Down in Hogan's Alley, better known as the Yellow Kid, starting in 1895. Dirks's editor, Rudolph Block, asked him to develop a Sunday comic based on Wilhelm Busch's cautionary tale, Max und Moritz. Dirks submitted his sketches, Block dubbed them The Katzenjammer Kids, and the first strip appeared on December 12, 1897.
Dirks took time off from his Journal work to serve his country in the Spanish-American War and on other occasions. In 1912, he requested a year's leave to tour Europe with his wife. The request led to a rupture with the Journal. After a lengthy and notorious legal battle, the federal courts ruled that Dirks had the right to continue to draw his characters for a rival newspaper chain, but that the Journal retained the right to the title The Katzenjammer Kids. Dirks thereupon began drawing a comic strip titled Hans and Fritz for the World, beginning in 1914. Anti-German sentiment during World War I led to the strip being renamed The Captain and the Kids. The Journal chose H.H. Knerr to continue The Katzenjammer Kids, and he and his successors have carried it on to the present day.
The success of The Katzenjammer Kids was due to more than just lucky circumstances. Dirks was a very gifted cartoonist with superb timing and a colorful gallery of different characters, including Hans and Fritz, Der Captain, Der Inspector, and Mama. In the mid-1950's, a romantic swindler named Fineas Flub was introduced to the strip. (Characters such as Rollo never appeared in Dirks' version of the strip.)
Dirks made substantial contributions to the graphic language of comic strips. Although not the first to use sequential panels or speech balloons, he was influential in their wider adoption. He also popularized such icons as speed lines, "seeing stars" for pain, and "sawing wood" for snoring.
As a pastime, Dirks produced serious paintings associated with the Ashcan School. Like many of his cartoonist colleagues, he was an avid golfer.
Dirks incrementally passed his cartooning duties on to his son John Dirks, who took over The Captain and the Kids in 1958. The elder Dirks died in New York City in 1968.
[edit] References and notes
[edit] Publications
- Rudolph Dirks: The Katzenjammer Kids. (1908), Dover Publications, New York 1974 (Repr.), ISBN 0-486-23005-8
[edit] Further reading
There are chatty articles about Rudolph Dirks in these books:
- Sheridan, Martin. Comics and Their Creators. Westport, Connecticut: Hyperion Press, 1977.
- Marschall, Richard. America's Great Comic-Strip Artists. New York: Abbeville Press, 1989.