ADVERTISEMENT
Welcome to ComicArtFans!

1940.08.30 “The Greatest Show on Earth” by Emidio Angelo

Artist: Emidio Angelo (All)

2 Comments  -   297 Views  -   0 Like


1940.08.30 “The Greatest Show on Earth” by Emidio Angelo  Comic Art
Click Image to View Full Size

 

Additional Images:


detail

 

   

Artwork Details

Title: 1940.08.30 “The Greatest Show on Earth” by Emidio Angelo
Artist: Emidio Angelo (All)
Media Type: Pen and Ink
Art Type: Illustration
For Sale Status: NFS
Views: 297
Likes on CAF:
0
Comments: 2
Added to Site: 6/12/2022
Comic Art Archive:

Description

1940.08.30 “The Greatest Show on Earth”
by Emidio (Mike) Angelo (1903-1990)
18 x 18 in., ink on art board
Coppola Collection

Emidio Angelo was born in Philadelphia, a year after his mother and father, a baker, arrived from Italy. He studied art from 1924 to 1928 at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Angelo joined The Philadelphia Inquirer as a political cartoonist in 1937 and worked there until 1954. He also drew cartoons for the Saturday Evening Post, Life and Esquire.

Henry Agard Wallace served as Secretary of Agriculture under FDR from 1933 to 1940. He strongly supported Roosevelt's New Deal. Overcoming strong opposition from conservative leaders in the Democratic Party, Wallace was nominated for vice president at the 1940 Democratic National Convention. The Roosevelt-Wallace ticket won the 1940 presidential election, and Wallace continued to play an important role in the Roosevelt administration before and during World War II.

As Roosevelt refused to commit to either retiring or seeking reelection during his second term, supporters of Wallace and other leading Democrats laid the groundwork for a presidential campaign in the 1940 election. After the outbreak of World War II in Europe in September 1939, Wallace publicly endorsed a third term for Roosevelt. Though Roosevelt never declared his candidacy, the 1940 Democratic National Convention nominated him for president. Shortly after being nominated, Roosevelt informed his supporters that he favored Wallace for vice president. Wallace had a strong base of support among farmers. But many conservative Democratic Party leaders disliked Wallace because of his former affiliation with the Republican Party.

The Roosevelt campaign settled on a strategy of keeping Roosevelt largely out of the fray of the election, leaving most of the campaigning to Wallace and other surrogates.

After the July convention, Wallace made foreign affairs the main focus of his campaigning. On August 29, 1940, he gave his own acceptance speech to a crowd of 7000 at the Des Moines Coliseum and, by radio, to the nation. He used Hitler’s name so often that the Chicago Times asked “Who is FDR running against, Hitler?” But he had used FDR’s name more, saying that "the replacement of Roosevelt ... would cause [Adolf] Hitler to rejoice."

Social/Sharing


About the Owner

Brian Coppola
Premium Gallery Owner
Joined: March 2009
Last Login: September 2025
Country: UNITED STATES
On CAF:

Premium Member Q&A
Artworks Commented On
Liked Art
Site Activity on CAF

Contact the Owner

Use can use a contact form to send an email to this gallery owner,
but, you must be logged in to use this feature.



Comments on this Artwork

You must be logged in to make comments.

Marcus Wai 
Member Since 2005

Posted on 6/12/2022

Very nice to show the mindset of the populous during that time and how strips like this did not have to play nice to get their point across.

Brian Coppola 
Member Since 2009

1 - Posted on 6/13/2022

Marcus Wai wrote:

Very nice to show the mindset of the populous during that time and how strips like this did not have to play nice to get their point across.

Hi Marcus - 100% agree - the timely and relevant-to-the-moment nature of editorial art conveys much more mindset than essays, editorials, and news reports because, I think, you're right at the pointy end of the stick. I think this art is overlooked. I am assembling a WW2 chronology at another site right now. Even for me, it is striking when you start to experience them in the context of each other compared with the randomness of purchase and posting.

Latest Updates

All

Michael Hosey

9/6/2025 7:55:00 PM

Timothy L.

9/6/2025 7:42:00 PM

Benedict Judas Hel

9/6/2025 7:22:00 PM

Mike Humphrey

9/6/2025 7:22:00 PM

Chris Johnson

9/6/2025 7:02:00 PM

 

Craig Zablo

9/6/2025 6:57:00 PM

PATRON OF COMIC ART

9/6/2025 6:32:00 PM

Rugrat Spawn

9/6/2025 5:47:00 PM

Mark Graham

9/6/2025 5:34:00 PM

J Murdock

9/6/2025 5:26:00 PM

eBay Auctions ADVERTISEMENT

Original Comic Art / Robotech II the Sentinels Book 2 #21 page 1

Heritage Auctions

Joe Bennett Joe Bennett Savage Hawkman #17 and 19

ComicLink Auctions

JOHN ROMITA JR. UNCANNY X-MEN #200 COVER (1985, "THE TRIAL OF MAGNETO!" ICONIC IMAGE OF THE 'NEW LOOK' MAGNETO IN CHAINS AND THE X-MEN IN BATTLE ON THIS MILESTONE COVER)

Comic Connect Auctions

Curt Swan - Superman's Girlfriend Lois Lane #105 Cover

Hakes Auctions

STAR WARS #2 COMIC BOOK PAGE ORIGINAL ART BY HOWARD CHAYKIN.
















Subscribe to the YouTube Channel.. FREE!




Featured Art Rep
Albert Moy Logo Albert Moy
26 Repped Artists
3 Accepting Commissions
Bone
Foccillo
Timm
Cho
Cassaday
Mahfood

 

Commission an Artist


For Sale Updates

Classified Updates

Rugrat Spawn

9/6/2025 5:47:00 PM

Chris Dietzel

9/6/2025 3:38:00 PM

Peter Venkman

9/6/2025 2:54:00 PM

Will Gabri-El

9/6/2025 12:52:00 PM

COMIX ART

9/6/2025 11:30:00 AM

Federico Bettini

9/6/2025 11:20:00 AM

Dealer Updates

TDArt Gallery

9/6/2025 7:54:00 PM

Anthony's Comicbook Art

9/6/2025 3:57:00 PM

Coollines Artwork

9/6/2025 3:28:00 PM

Will's Comic Art Page

9/6/2025 12:52:00 PM

Essential Sequential

9/6/2025 12:15:00 PM

Kinetic Collectibles

9/6/2025 12:15:00 PM





Become a Premium CAF Gallery Owner & you'll be supporting CAF and also gain access to many services and features not available to standard members.

  • Sell Artwork in the CAF Classifieds
  • Daily Email Alerts based on your own Searches
  • Follow Other Gallery Owners
  • 6 Months Market Data Access
  • Larger Image Uploads ... and Much More!