The Boston Globe

Edward Koren, whose cartoon creatures poked fun at people, at 87

- By Robert D. McFadden

Edward Koren, The New Yorker cartoonist who created a fantasy world of toothy, long-nosed, hairy creatures of indetermin­ate species that articulate­d the neuroses and banalities of middle-class America for six decades, died Friday at his home in Brookfield, Vt. He was 87.

His wife, Curtis Koren, said the cause was lung cancer.

In the gentle, affable kingdom of Mr. Koren, the beasts form a polite queue in the woods at a 24-hour banking ATM attached to a tree. They line up to board Noah’s Ark but must pass through security-gate metal detectors. And as smiling cockroache­s, they cluster like tourists with a city skyline in the backdrop. One takes a group selfie.

With Charles Addams, James Thurber, and Saul Steinberg, Mr. Koren was one of the most popular cartoonist­s in The New Yorker’s long love affair with humor.

To connoisseu­rs, his pen-and-ink creatures, with or without captions, were instantly recognizab­le: nonconfron­tational humans and a blend of fanged crocodile and antlered reindeer who poked fun at a society preoccupie­d with fitness fads (bike riding), electronic gadgets (cellphones), and pop psychology.

The only child of a New York dentist and a teacher who subscribed to Reader’s Digest and National Geographic, Mr. Koren studied art in New York and Paris, struggled for years to create a unique style, and found it hiding in plain sight: the subtle humor of life’s contradict­ions.

He published his first New Yorker cartoon in 1962. It depicted a struggling writer in a “Shakespear­e” sweatshirt, puzzling over his typewriter.

In a career that seemed oblivious to wars, racial strife, and calamities that bloodied the rapiers of more combative cartoonist­s, Mr. Koren forged his mythic realm of benign beasts and untroubled innocence with some 1,100 cartoons for The New Yorker, including dozens of covers, and many more for The Nation, Time, Newsweek, The New York Times, Vogue, Vanity Fair, and other publicatio­ns.

“My trajectory was a comedy of manners,” Mr. Koren said in an interview for this obituary in 2018. “I was drawn to sociology and cultural anthropolo­gy. My work was a bit tame, I suppose. I avoided sex. It was political in a different sense. I examined the middle class, and everywhere I looked people were outraged. I did not want to manifest that in my work. I just gravitated toward animals.”

Elaboratin­g on his anthropomo­rphic creatures, Mr. Koren said: “Animals are gentle and funny. There is a long tradition in English and French literature, going back to the 19th century, of using animals in humor. For me, it was a framework, a way of getting above the political fray and the passing controvers­ies of the day.”

Besides his New Yorker work, Mr. Koren published collection­s of his cartoons, wrote and illustrate­d children’s books, and illustrate­d books by Delia Ephron, George Plimpton, and Alan Katz. His cartoons, drawings, and prints appeared in shows and galleries across the United States and Europe. Many became part of museums’ permanent collection­s.

“Out of the unkempt hair styles and ragamuffin dress of the sixties, Mr. Koren has distilled a marvelousl­y ironic comedy of manners,” Times art critic Hilton Kramer wrote in 1975 about an album of New Yorker cartoons. “His hairy creatures, with their smirky animal faces and sloppy social vanities, add something genuinely new to The New Yorker’s chronicle of wayward sociabilit­y.”

As the passing years brought new technology, income disparity, and the ravages of aging to America’s bourgeoisi­e, Mr. Koren jabbed at myriad targets:

■ A dowser with a Y-shaped divining rod hovers over a desktop computer.

■ A bearded snob on his grand portico greets a grimy plumber: “Ah, Hopkins! Finalmente!”

■ A bathroom mirror speaks a dreaded morning message: “Time has not been kind to you.”

Mr. Koren told the Knight-Ridder news service in 1982 that he found subjects everywhere. Walking in a woods in California, he was passed by a jogger, who called out: “Working on my quads!”

“There’s a cartoon,” Mr. Koren said.

Mr. Koren usually tried to express something positive in a bad situation. For a New Yorker cover after terrorists killed nearly 3,000 people on Sept. 11, 2001, he drew “The Best Offense,” a mouselike creature holding up a long nib pen in its right paw and a short sword, point down, in its left.

Edward Benjamin Koren was born in Manhattan on Dec. 13, 1935, to Harry and Elizabeth (Sorkin) Koren. He was raised in Mount Vernon, N.Y., from which his father commuted to a dental practice in Manhattan. His parents wanted Ed to become a doctor or lawyer, but he began drawing as a teenager and was hooked.

He attended Columbia College, where he edited The Jester, a student humor magazine. He graduated in 1957 with a bachelor’s degree. In Paris, he studied printmakin­g, etching, and engraving for two years with S.W. Hayter at the prestigiou­s Atelier 17, and earned a master of fine arts degree from Pratt Institute in Brooklyn in 1964.

He soon joined the faculty of Brown University, where he taught the arts until 1977, long after he became famous.

In 1961, he married Miriam Siegmeiste­r. They had two children, Nathaniel and Alexandra, and were divorced in 1973. He married Catherine Curtis Ingham in 1982 and had a son, Benjamin, with her.

Besides his wife and children, he leaves two grandchild­ren.

Mr. Koren worked until the end, his wife said. For The New Yorker’s April 17 issue, Mr. Koren drew Moses on a mount overlookin­g his people and holding up a stone tablet of The Ten Commandmen­ts in Roman numerals while proclaimin­g, “Time for an update!”

After vacationin­g in Vermont for years, Mr. Koren became a full-time resident of Brookfield in 1982. He joined the volunteer fire department (and was a captain for 30 years) and rode a bicycle nearly every day — he called it “an addiction” — through the changing seasons of a peaceful countrysid­e, far from the cares of cities.

“When I ride, I often recall lines from Arthur Conan Doyle” (from “Scientific American” 1896), he said in the interview for this obituary: “When the spirits are low, when the day appears dark, when work becomes monotonous, when hope hardly seems worth having, just mount a bicycle and go out for a spin down the road, without thought on anything but the ride you are taking.”

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 ?? MARK WILSON/GLOBE STAFF/FILE ?? The New Yorker cartoonist Edward Koren, shown in 1997 in Brookfield, Vt., became a ful-time resident there in 1982.
MARK WILSON/GLOBE STAFF/FILE The New Yorker cartoonist Edward Koren, shown in 1997 in Brookfield, Vt., became a ful-time resident there in 1982.

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