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Browse All : Images from 1934 and 1925
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Author
[Sarg, Anthony Frederick, Central Savings Bank]
Note
Color pictorial map, 35x27, on sheet 45.5x30.5, folded in mailing envelope 23x15.5, with decorative title cartouche. Produced as a promotion for Central Savings Bank on the occasion of its 75th anniversary, with promotional text on the back invited potential customers. Designed by designer, decorator, cartoonist, illustrator, sculptor, writer and lecturer. Anthony Frederick Sarg, born in Guatemala to a German father and English mother, moved to New York City in 1915. He became a U.S. citizen in 1920. He was an illustration artist for various publications including the Saturday Evening Post. In 1917. Map shows Greenwich Village in New York City with people in various activities, streets, landmarks and buildings, such as the Salmagundi Club, the Washington Square Arch and New York University. Includes a key below the cartouche provides a guide to restaurants, stores, bars, and the Whitney Museum of American Art at its former West 8th Street location. In the lower margin, shows portraits of Mark Twain and Washington Irving.
Author
[Sarg, Anthony Frederick, Central Savings Bank]
Note
Color pictorial map, 35x27, on sheet 45.5x30.5, folded in mailing envelope 23x15.5, with decorative title cartouche. Produced as a promotion for Central Savings Bank on the occasion of its 75th anniversary, with promotional text on the back invited potential customers. Designed by designer, decorator, cartoonist, illustrator, sculptor, writer and lecturer. Anthony Frederick Sarg, born in Guatemala to a German father and English mother, moved to New York City in 1915. He became a U.S. citizen in 1920. He was an illustration artist for various publications including the Saturday Evening Post. In 1917. Map shows Greenwich Village in New York City with people in various activities, streets, landmarks and buildings, such as the Salmagundi Club, the Washington Square Arch and New York University. Includes a key below the cartouche provides a guide to restaurants, stores, bars, and the Whitney Museum of American Art at its former West 8th Street location. In the lower margin, shows portraits of Mark Twain and Washington Irving.
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