BSS
  12 Mar 2025, 11:20

Talk of the town: Iconic covers of the New Yorker magazine

NEW YORK, March 12, 2025 (BSS/AFP) - From its first edition 100 years ago
through the atomic bombs dropped on Japan, to the attacks of September 11,
2001 and on to the present day, New Yorker covers have won both artistic and
journalistic acclaim.

Here are some of the magazine's most memorable covers:

- Dandy turned mascot -

The publication's first edition came out on February 21, 1925 priced at 15
cents, emblazoned with a caricature of a fictional dandy, inspired by the
Count d'Orsay, looking at a butterfly through a monocle.

Created by the artist Rea Irvin, the fictional character dubbed Eustace
Tilley has become the mascot of the journal, reappearing year after year in a
humorous way, depicted variously as a hipster, wearing an anti-Covid mask --
and with a smartphone in place of a monocle.

- Hiroshima -

In 1946, the New Yorker devoted an entire issue to John Hersey's report on
the consequences of the US atomic bomb on Hiroshima.

The cover features a bucolic landscape, drawn by Charles E. Martin.

At the time, "the images had to be almost a way to console ourselves over the
world's trauma," said the New Yorker's artistic director, Francoise Mouly.

The disparity is such that it necessitated the inclusion of banner on the
cover -- "this entire issue is devoted to the story of how an atomic bomb
destroyed a city."

- September 11, 2001 attacks -

The Twin Towers of the World Trade Center adorn the front cover, shrouded in
darkness so black and opaque that they are barely distinguishable.

"It responds to what I experienced that day," said Mouly, who was near the
towers with her husband, the famous cartoonist Art Spiegelman, and her
daughter when the two skyscrapers collapsed.

The couple co-signed the cover.

"I really felt that there was no possible reaction," Mouly said.

- Controversial Obama issue -

One cover of note published when the 2008 presidential campaign was in full
swing, as hardline conservatives had brought a lawsuit against Barack Obama,
questioning his "American-ness" and falsely insinuating that he was not born
in the United States, or that he was Muslim.

The New Yorker responded to the kerfuffle with satire, a drawing titled "The
Politics of Fear" by Barry Blitt, depicting the Democratic candidate in a
djellaba, and his wife Michelle dressed as an armed militant in the Oval
Office.

The illustration shows a portrait of Osama bin Laden hanging on the wall and
an American flag burning in the fireplace.

The caricature "raised an outcry," said Mouly.