Boardman "Mike" Michael Robinson (1876–1952) was a Canadian-born American painter, illustrator and cartoonist.[1][2]
Biography
Early years
Boardman Robinson was born September 6, 1876, in Nova Scotia. He spent his childhood in England and Canada, before moving to Boston in the first half of the 1890s.[3] Robinson worked his way through normal school, following a program to learn mechanical drafting.[3]
In 1903, Robinson married Sarah Senter Whitney.[4] The couple moved to Paris where Robinson briefly worked as art editor for Vogue, before returning to the United States in 1904.[3]
In 1910, Robinson took a job on the staff of the New York Tribune drawing editorial cartoons, a position which he retained for four years. With the eruption of World War I in 1914, Robinson's increasingly radicalanti-militarist political views brought him into conflict with his employer and he quit the publication.[3]
In 1915, Robinson travelled to Eastern Europe on behalf of Metropolitan Magazine along with journalist John Reed.[3] The pair saw first hand the effects of the European war in Russia, Serbia, Macedonia and Greece. In 1916 Reed's account of the journey was collected in a book called The War in Eastern Europe, to which Robinson contributed illustrations.[3]
On his return from Europe, Robinson worked at the socialist monthly The Masses. His highly political cartoons as well as the general anti-war stance of The Masses was deemed to have violated the recently passed Espionage Act of 1917, and The Masses had to cease publication. Robinson, along with the other defendants were acquitted on October 5, 1918. Following The Masses, Robinson became a contributing editor to The Liberator and The New Masses, working with former Masses editor Max Eastman.
Robinson is also known as a muralist. Some of his mural commissions include works at Rockefeller Center and the Department of Justice Building in Washington, D.C., and a nine-panel mural on the History of Trade for Kaufmann's flagship department store in Pittsburgh completed in 1929.
^ abcdefghiElise K. Kenney and Earl Davis, "Boardman Robinson ," in Rebecca Zurier, Art for the Masses: A Radical Magazine and Its Graphics, 1911-1917. Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1988; pg. 180.