Reaction to the outbreak of the war The German invasion of Poland found Szyk in Britain where he supervised the publication of the
Haggadah and continued to exhibit his works. The artist immediately reacted to the outbreak of World War II by producing war-themed works. One feature which distinguished Szyk from other caricaturists who were active during World War II was that he concentrated on the presentation of the enemy in his works and seldom depicted the leaders or soldiers of the Allies. This was a characteristic feature of Szyk's work till the end of the war. In January 1940, the exhibition of his 72 caricatures entitled
War and "Kultur" in Poland opened at the Fine Art Society in London, and was well received by the critics. As the reviewer of
The Times wrote: Szyk drew more and more caricatures directed at the Axis powers and their leaders, and his popularity steadily grew. In 1940, the American publisher
G.P. Putnam's Sons offered to publish a collection of his drawings. Szyk agreed, and the result was the 1941 book
The New Order, available months before the United States joined the war.
Thomas Craven declared on the dust jacket of
The New Order that Szyk: Some years later, in 1946, art critic
Carl Van Doren said of Szyk:
Moving to the United States and war caricatures as the embodiment of evil: his eyes reflect human skulls, his black hair the Latin words "Vae Victis" [woe to the vanquished (ones)]. magazine during
World War II. At the beginning of July 1940, with the support of the British government and the
Polish government-in-exile, Arthur Szyk left Britain for North America, on assignment to popularize in the New World the struggle of the British and Polish nations against
Nazism. His first destination on the continent was Canada, where he was welcomed enthusiastically by the media: they wrote about his engagement in the fight with Nazi Germany, and the Halifax-based
Morning Herald even reported about the alleged bounty Hitler had put on Szyk. In December 1940, Szyk and his wife and daughter went to New York City, where he lived till 1945. His son, George, had enlisted in the
Free French Forces commanded by General
Charles de Gaulle. Soon after his arrival in the U.S., Szyk was inspired by Roosevelt's 1941 "
Four Freedoms"
State of the Union speech to illustrate the Four Freedoms, preceding
Norman Rockwell's Four Freedoms by two years; these were used as
poster stamps during the war, and appeared on the Four Freedoms Award which was presented to
Harry Truman,
George Marshall and
Herbert H. Lehman. Szyk became an immensely popular artist in his new home country the war, especially after the Japanese
attack on Pearl Harbor and the entry of the United States into the war. His caricatures of the leaders of the Axis powers (Hitler, Mussolini, Hirohito) and other drawings appeared practically everywhere: in newspapers, magazines (including
Time (cover caricature of Admiral Isoroku Yamamoto in December 1941),
Esquire, and ''
Collier's), on posters, postcards and stamps, in secular, religious and military publications, on public and military buildings. He also produced advertisements for Coca-Cola and U.S. Steel, and exhibited in the galleries of M. Knodler & Co., Andre Seligmann, Inc., Messrs. Wildenstein & Co., the Philadelphia Art Alliance, the Brooklyn Museum, the Palace of the Legion of Honor in San Francisco, and the White House. More than 25 exhibitions were staged altogether in the United States during the war years. At the end of the war, in 1945, his drawing Two Down and One to Go
was used in a propaganda film calling American soldiers to the final assault on Japan. According to the Esquire'' magazine, the posters with Szyk's drawings enjoyed even bigger popularity with American soldiers than
pin-up girls put on the walls of American military bases. In total, more than one million American soldiers saw Szyk's in reproduction at some 500 locations administered by the United Services Organization. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951) Fool the Axis - Use Prophylaxis prevents veneral disease! 1942 WW2 propaganda John Wyeth & Brother Inc. Philadelphia Pa. USA Mussolini, Hideki Tojo, Hitler caricatures wolfsonian-FIU WOLF000177 No known copyrigh.jpg|Fool the Axis Use Prophylaxis poster (1942), Philadelphia. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Satan Leads the Ball (1942), New York.jpg|Satan Leads the Ball (1942), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). The Nibelungen series, Valhalla (1942), New York.jpg|The Nibelungen series, Valhalla (1942), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). The Nibelungen series, Ride of the Valkyries (1942), New York.jpg|The Nibelungen series, Ride of the Valkyries (1942), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). In Comradeship of Arms series, King Jagiełło of Poland (1942), New York.jpg|In Comradeship of Arms series, King Jagiełło of Poland (1942), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). In Comradeship of Arms series, Joan of Arc (1942), New York.jpg|In Comradeship of Arms series, Joan of Arc (1942), New York File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). De Profundis (Chicago Sun) (1943), Chicago.jpg|De Profundis - Cain, Where is Abel Thy Brother? as published in the
Chicago Sun, 1943. File:Vlasov by Arthur Szyk.jpg|
General Vlasov, the Russian
Quisling (1943), New York [Dedicated to the
White general
Anton Denikin known for Jewish pogroms] File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). To Be Shot as Dangerous Enemies of the Third Reich (1943), New York.jpg|To Be Shot as Dangerous Enemies of the Third Reich (1943), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). We're Running Short of Jews (1943), New York.jpg|We're Running Short of Jews (1943), New York. [Dedicated to Szyk's mother who was murdered in the Shoah] File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Tears of Rage - Action Not Pity (The New York Times) (1943), New York.jpg|Tears of Rage - "Action, Not Pity" as published in
The New York Times, 1943. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Black, White and Jew in Common Cause (1943), New York.jpg|Black, White and Jew in Common Cause (1943), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Save Human Lives poster stamps (1944), New York.jpg|Save Human Lives poster stamps (1944), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Palestine Restricted (reproduced 1946) (1944), New York.jpg|Palestine Restricted (1944) as reproduced on a 1946 report. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Ink & Blood, Frontispiece (1944), New York.jpg|Ink & Blood, Frontispiece (1944), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Two Down and One to Go pamphlet (1945), Washington DC.jpg|Two Down and One to Go pamphlet (1945), Washington DC. presented with an Arthur Szyk work in 1956. Szyk himself died 5 years earlier. In recognition for his services in the fight against Nazism,
Fascism, and the Japanese aggression,
Eleanor Roosevelt, First Lady and wife of President F. D. Roosevelt, wrote about Szyk several times in her newspaper column,
My Day. On January 8, 1943, she wrote:
Social justice on the home front Though Szyk was a fierce opponent of
Nazi Germany and the rest of the
Axis powers, he did not avoid topics or themes which presented the
Allies in a less favourable light. Szyk criticized the United Kingdom for its policies in the Middle East, especially its practice of imposing limits on Jewish emigration to Palestine. Szyk also criticized the apparent passivity of American-Jewish organizations towards the tragedy of their European fellows. He supported the work of
Hillel Kook, also known as Peter Bergson, a member of the
Zionist organization
Irgun, who mounted a publicity campaign in American society whose aim was to draw the American public's attention to the fate of the European Jews. Szyk illustrated for example full-page advertisements (sometimes with copy by screenwriter
Ben Hecht) which were published in
The New York Times. The artist also spoke against racial tensions in the United States and criticized the fact that the black population did not have the same rights as the whites. In one of his drawings, there are two American soldiers – one black and one white – escorting German prisoners of war. When the white one asks the black: "And what would you do with Hitler?", the black one answers: "I would have made him a Negro and dropped him somewhere in the U.S.A." Szyk's attitude to his mother country, Poland, was very interesting and full of contradictions. Even though he regarded himself both as Jewish and Polish and showed the suffering of the Poles (not only those of Jewish descent) in the Russian-occupied Polish territories in his drawings, even though he benefited from financial support of the
Polish government-in-exile (at least at the beginning of the war), Szyk sometimes presented that government in a negative light, especially at the end of World War II. In a controversial drawing dated 1944, a group of debating Polish politicians are shown as opponents of Roosevelt,
Joseph Stalin, the "Bolshevik agent"
Winston Churchill, and at the same time adherents of Father
Charles Coughlin, known for his antisemitic views, as well as "(national) democracy" and "(national) socialism." Around 1943, Szyk, a former participant in the Polish–Soviet War, also completely changed his opinions on the Soviet Union. His drawing from 1944 already depicts outright a soldier of the Moscow-supported
People's Army of Poland next to a
Red Army soldier, both liberating Poland. Whatever his political views, in July 1942 Szyk took the time to look after the family of the Polish diplomat and poet General
Bolesław Wieniawa-Długoszowski when the General committed suicide. He invited his wife
Bronisława Wieniawa-Długoszowska and daughter Zuzanna to stay with his family for six weeks in the country. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). De Profundis (Chicago Sun) (1943), Chicago.jpg|De Profundis (
Chicago Sun, 1943) File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Tears of Rage - Action Not Pity (The New York Times) (1943), New York.jpg|Tears of Rage - Action - Not Pity (
The New York Times, 1943) File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). We Must Ask Washington (1944), New York.jpg|We Must Ask Washington. New York, 1944.
Book illustrations Even though caricatures dominated Szyk's artistic output during the war, he was still engaged in other areas of art. In 1940, the American publisher
George Macy, who saw his illustrations for the
Haggadah at an exhibition in London, asked him to illustrate the
Rubaiyat, a collection of poems of the Iranian poet
Omar Khayyám. In 1943, the artist started work on illustrations for the
Book of Job, published in 1946; he also illustrated collections of fairy tales by
Hans Christian Andersen (''Andersen's Fairy Tales
, 1945) and Charles Perrault (Mother Goose'', which was not published). File:Arthur Szyk02.jpg|
Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám (1940), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Andersen's Fairy Tales, inside cover illustration (1944), New York.jpg|Andersen's Fairy Tales, inside cover illustration (1944), New York. File:Arthur Szyk (1894-1951). Andersen's Fairy Tales, The King and Queen of Roses (1945), New York.jpg|Andersen's Fairy Tales, The King and Queen of Roses (1945), New York. == Postwar: final years ==