RIT alumnus John W. Tomac ’03 (illustration) has recreated The New Yorker’s iconic dandy Eustace Tilley as a dog for the cover of the magazine’s February 2023 issue, which is on stands now. Tomac’s ...
In February, 1925, Rea Irvin, The New Yorker’s first art editor, designed the cover of the magazine’s inaugural issue. That cover’s central character, a dandy peering at a butterfly through a monocle, ...
This week’s Anniversary Issue cover, “Brooklyn’s Eustace,” is by Simon Greiner, a thirty-one-year-old reader from Sydney, Australia, who submitted it through our 2013 Eustace Tilley Contest. The 2012 ...
The New Yorker turns 90 this year. To celebrate, the magazine has printed this week’s issue with nine different covers, all featuring 21st-century renditions of its top-hatted, monocled, dandyish ...
Looking for something to do over your holiday break? Bust out the thinking caps and put pen to paper for this year's Eustace Tilley contest! Last year saw an MTA subway map Tilley, and a Mr.
Put your pencils down, The New Yorker's Eustace Tilley contest is over! The magazine will be announcing the winner on February 4th, but their Flickr Pool is currently stocked with all of the entries.
The butterfly, which you’ll see on almost all the new covers, appeared on the first cover with Eustace Tilley. In 2005, Louis Menand wrote about “The many faces of Eustace Tilley.” It’s hard to know ...
The days of seeing primarily white faces grace magazine covers are coming to an end, slowly but surely. The cover of the very first edition of The New Yorker portrayed a dandy watching a butterfly ...
For its latest artistic masterpiece, Barry Blitt transformed the magazine's iconic first cover from 1925 — featuring New Yorker mascot Eustace Tilley inquisitively gazing at a butterfly — into ...
The Edge of the American West recalls that, on this day in 1925, The New Yorker took its first bow on the American literary scene. The real icon, EAW says, is not Eustace Tilley, the mag’s original ...