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Easter Puck by Ross, Gordon, 1873-1946, artist
Public domain · digitally restored by comicbooks.com · view the restored high-resolution scan ↗
The Holiday Number: Puck in Full Color

Easter Puck

Ross, Gordon, 1873-1946, artist · Easter 1910

A red devil's face grins out from a stand of white Easter lilies, horns and slit eyes barely hidden among the blooms. Gordon Ross draws the flowers as a flat decorative screen, green stalks and pale trumpets filling the frame, with the red intruder the only warm note. A single diagonal slash of red crosses the upper corner. easter Puck is lettered above in an ornate outlined face. The idea is pure Puck: the serpent in the garden, temptation lurking inside the season's most innocent symbol. Ross, a Scottish-born illustrator who worked long for the magazine, keeps the design poster-flat and lets the joke land through color alone. On a holiday cover this spare, the menace reads as wit rather than warning.

About this artifact

Creator
Ross, Gordon, 1873-1946, artist
Date
Easter 1910
Rights
Public domain — free to view, share, and reuse.
Restoration
Digitally restored and hosted by comicbooks.com · high-resolution version available.

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