From Voice ~ Topics: graphic design, history, illustration
’Twas the Icon of Christmas
Santa Claus (aka St. Nick, Kris Kringle, Père Noël) so personifies Christmas it would be inconceivable not to think of him piloting his gift-dispensing sleigh on Christmas Eve. Yet this jolly red giant only came into existence in 1841. That year Philadelphia merchant J. W. Parkinson hired a man to dress in a crimson suit and climb in and out of a makeshift chimney outside his shop. The advertising ploy worked, but Santa did not become the universal Claus until 1863, when the American political cartoonist Thomas Nast, creator of the Democrat donkey and Republican elephant, rendered the quintessential Christmas icon in pen and ink.
The Bavarian-born Nast originated this archetype while working for New York’s Harper’s Weekly in an attempt to spiritually uplift Union Army soldiers and their families who made sacrifices during the darkest days of the bloody Civil War. Nast was certainly inspired by his own childhood memories of Saint Nicholas, a fourth-century German bishop known for kindness and generosity as he traveled from village to town wearing a tall miter, flowing robe and long white beard, dispensing presents to one and all. Saint Nicholas Day in Europe (December 6) was traditionally devoted to gift giving so Nast’s Santa, the newly deputized monitor of who’s naughty and nice, also bestowed toys on well-behaved children everywhere. Nast further developed Santa mythology by incorporating such German folk characters as dwarfs (i.e., elves) as trusted helpers. In 1866 Nast’s drawing entitled “Santa Claus and His Works” established him as a toy maker par excellence, and in his 1869 book of collected drawings, with a poem by George P. Webster, Nast established the frigid and mysterious North Pole as home of Santa’s bustling workshop.
Haddon Sundblom created visions of Santa Claus for Coca-Cola’s advertising through 1964, the year of the ad pictured here. (from “Coca-Cola & Santa Claus”)
For decades afterNast’s 1881 drawing of the jovial and portly “Merry Old Santa Claus” influenced Norman Rockwell’s 1920 Santa Claus cover for the Saturday Evening Post, which became a veritable trademark that contributed to the modern Santa “brand.” But actually the most popular of all was introduced in 1931 when Haddon Sundblom painted an even more iconic version of the rotund and rosy-cheeked Santa to promote the sales of Coca-Cola. Using himself as model, Sundblom painted new tableau each and every year for thirty-three seasons. Santa became more recognizable than any comparable commercial trademark and when placed in advertisements with other secular Christmas personae, like snowmen and reindeer, Coca-Cola totally dominated the popular imagination and holiday market—and isn’t that kind of marketing what Christmas is all about?
1950s Christmas tree ornament packaging. (flickr: Roadsidepictures)
In addition to these commercial inspirations, many religious symbols—remember Christmas commemorates the birth of Christ not the birth of Santa—were borrowed from non-Christian ritual. In the fourth century the Roman Church declared that Christmas should be celebrated on December 25 and borrowed pagan feasting and gift giving from the Roman Saturnalia (also celebrated in December). Yet certain celebrations were just too threateningly idolatrous: The Church long forbade decorating houses with twigs from evergreen trees and shrubs, which was also common practice during Saturnalia. So it was not until the 16th century that Germans introduced Christmas tree decorating, spawning a brisk new market for decorative and symbolic trinkets and baubles. While In England around this time the Puritans, influenced by the Protestant reformer John Calvin, forbade overt observances of Christmas altogether, which suppressed the manufacture of icons for a long time.
Arguably, the most significant fusion of religious and secular iconography occurred in 1822 on Christmas Eve when New York poet, Clement Clarke Moore, read to his children a self-composed rhyme called “An Account of a Visit from St. Nicholas” (known as “’Twas the Night Before Christmas”). In his verse Moore first introduced St. Nick’s eight reindeer and named them—Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid, Donner and Blitzen (nine counting Rudolph, the one with the cherry nose). He further choreographed St. Nick’s triumphant, albeit astonishing, entrance down the narrow chimney. Moore’s protagonist was actually pretty small—in fact, the poem describes a miniature sleigh with a little old driver— which might account for how such a large man could squeeze down such tight flues. By 1843 Charles Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, illustrated by John Leech, added even more joyous Christmas metaphors, like the bloated and sated Ghost of Christmas Present, who entered the seasonal liturgy along with visions of sugarplums, snow angels, and bulging stockings. By the mid-19th century England’s Prince Albert (of tobacco-in-a-can fame) decreed, as only a royal can do, that Puritan prohibitions were to cease and tree decoration should be the right of all, which popularized the practice across the British Empire. Incidentally, the ritual of sending of festive Christmas cards began in 1843 when Sir Henry Cole of the Victoria and Albert Museum customized the first card to combine generic holiday imagery with personal greetings. Thus began one of the many traditions of the most consumerist holiday of the year. And to all a good night.
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Thanks for the excellent article. One thing I'm not sure to have understood though : when Thomas Nast borrowed from Saint Nicholas, is that only regarding looks, or is it that he actually invented the Santa Claus character ?
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Wikipedia has the answer :
Pre-modern representations of the gift-giver from church history and folklore, notably St Nicholas and Sinterklaas, merged with the British character Father Christmas to create the character known to Britons and Americans as Santa Claus. Father Christmas dates back at least as far as the 17th century in Britain, and pictures of him survive from that era, portraying him as a jolly well-nourished bearded man dressed in a long, green, fur-lined robe. -
I would say that Leyendecker holds more responsibility for the "Modern" Santa brand, his Saturday Evening Post covers pre-dating Norman Rockwell's.
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Great little seasonal writeup, Steven! May I add another tidbit? Rudolph was created in the 1940s as a department store promotion, and his first illustrated appearance was done by Denver Gillen.
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Those idyllic images created by Haddon Sundblom for Coca Cola are unmatched to this day in terms of their sheer sentimentality (and thus marketing power). I'm sure you're familiar with another idyllic image Sundblom painted for Playboy's 1972 Christmas issue (cover) which was embellished with a typographical parody of the Coca-Cola logo...
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I think it is interesting how someone's idea or vision/design has grown to become a worldwide phenomenon. I can't imagine Christmas (especially as a child) without the image of Santa Clause. I was surprised that the image of Santa has only been around since the 1800s. It is something that seems like it has been there forever. Today Santa is seen as a bigger symbol for Christmas than Christ himself and that is something big. To think that an image someone had created is now the number one image for the holiday season is incredible. Since the "birth" of Santa traditions invovling the season have changed and it seems to be more commercial than ever before.
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It was interesting to find out that Santa Claus only existed since the 18th century. As long as I can remember Coca-Cola has aided the influence of our Christmas spirit by enhancing the product label in a way that everyone feels it has become apart of their own holiday traditions. Every year I find myself waiting to see the first Cocoa-Cola advertisements involving the North Pole and the family of polar bears. For me, this signifies its time to start getting ready for Christmas. This feeling of tradition was simply by ads that have created this Christmas fantasy world that appeals to majority of people.
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It is also believed that the icon of father Christmas has shamanistic roots, referring specifically to the fly agaric mushroom. The red and white color scheme, aside from being the colors of Coca-Cola, are a reference to the familiar red and white mushroom. Reindeer were known to have eaten these hallucinogenic mushrooms in the wild, which would cause them to act in a drunken manner (so, in a manner of speaking, they were 'flying' in this muscimol-induced stupor). It is a disputed theory, but the connections are there nonetheless.
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I was astonished to find that the idea of Santa Claus has only been excepted since 1863. Even though he isn't real, I would have a hard time seeing Christmas not being associated with Santa Claus. I would be interesting to travel back in time and see what it would have been like to see a Christmas that wasn't associated with Santa Claus. It is hard to believe that the idea of Santa Claus was influenced so heavily by one man and that man being Thomas Nast a political cartoonist from America. I think that Coke has done an excellent job over that years of using Santa Claus as a selling point. I can remember early on in my life all of the times I wanted to drink Coke because it had the polar bears on it or Santa peeking out from the end of the label. Coca-Cola always put me in a good mood and got me excited for the Christmas season. Even looking at it now, I think that Coca-Cola does and excellent job still using the Santa Claus imagine to their advantage. Their cans during Christmas time still always get me in the mood for Christmas and I always know Christmas season is upon when I see the first Coke packaging with Santa Claus on it I know Christmas must be coming up soon.



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