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Getting On, in Smart Society, from “High Society”. By Anne Fish 1920

32.94


Sketches by Anne Fish, from “High Society”, pages 08-09, published in 1920.
Getting On, in Smart Society. If, at First, You Don’t Succeed, Dine ’em and Dine ’em Again.
First published in Vanity Fair, October 1916.

High-Resolution file from the original book, digitally restored. Max-Quality jpg (10000x5000px, 27.91MB).
Full editable texts in the metadata.

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Copyright Notice

This work was published in the United States before 1929 and is in the public domain due to copyright expiration.
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Please notice that any advice or comment provided here is not and does not purport to be legal advice as defined by s.12 of the Legal Services Act 2007.

In December 1920, G.P. Putnam’s Sons published “High Society,” a unique book celebrating the work of the star-illustrator Anne Fish. It’s a selection of drawings published on Vanity Fair US from 1914 to 1920.
The book provides a unique, rich lens into American and international high society’s lifestyles.

An excerpt of the original presentation of the book: High Society. Hints on how to Attain, Relish – and Survive It.A Pictorial Guide to Life in our Upper Circles.
High Society is a new collection of Fish’s remarkable drawings of life in our upper circles. It is a complete pictorial guide to the ways and habits of these strange beings who dwell in the thick, sweet atmosphere of adulation and the rich, regrant redolence of wealth.
Dowagers, divorcées and débutantes, bridge friends, trick butlers, tango addicts, amateur vampires—the fortunate reader meet them all in this book. And sees them with the amused, satirical eye, and through the clever intelligence, of one of the most distinguished of living black and white illustrators.

There is beauty in Fish’s extraordinary gallery as well as satire. The patterns of the flapper’s frocks are like laces and hangings by Beardsley. A Pomeranian on the rug becomes a patch of elegant scroller like something in a Japanese print. Even her profiteering millionaires become designs made up of deft and satisfying curves. See all pages here

More info on this item

In December 1920, G.P. Putnam’s Sons published “High Society,” a unique book celebrating the work of the star-illustrator Anne Fish. It’s a selection of drawings published on Vanity Fair US from 1914 to 1920.
The book provides a unique, rich lens into American and international high society’s lifestyles.

An excerpt of the original presentation of the book: High Society. Hints on how to Attain, Relish – and Survive It.A Pictorial Guide to Life in our Upper Circles.
High Society is a new collection of Fish’s remarkable drawings of life in our upper circles. It is a complete pictorial guide to the ways and habits of these strange beings who dwell in the thick, sweet atmosphere of adulation and the rich, regrant redolence of wealth.

Dowagers, divorcées and débutantes, bridge friends, trick butlers, tango addicts, amateur vampires—the fortunate reader meet them all in this book. And sees them with the amused, satirical eye, and through the clever intelligence, of one of the most distinguished of living black and white illustrators.

There is beauty in Fish’s extraordinary gallery as well as satire. The patterns of the flapper’s frocks are like laces and hangings by Beardsley. A Pomeranian on the rug becomes a patch of elegant scroller like something in a Japanese print. Even her profiteering millionaires become designs made up of deft and satisfying curves. See all pages here

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