Oskar Andersson


Oskar Emil "O.A." Andersson was a Swedish cartoonist and one of Sweden's first true comic creators. He greatly influenced Swedish cartooning culture.

Biography

Early life

Andersson began working in his teens in the Royal Mint. When he realised his passions lay with drawing, he enrolled in Technology school and passed with good qualifications. Design, however, did not interest him. His teacher, Kaleb Althin, encouraged him to take up caricaturing.

Turn to cartooning

At the age of twenty, Andersson debuted with his cartoons in the Söndags-Nisse magazine, where he soon got employed. Inspired by the early comic artists from the United States and England in the late 19th century, Andersson created Sweden's first recurring comic strips: Bröderna Napoleon och Bartholomeus Lunds från Grönköping Resa Jorden Runt, Mannen Som Gör Vad Som Faller Honom In and Urhunden, all around the turn of the century.
Andersson was apparently friends with Swedish sculptor Carl Milles.

Suicide

In 1906, Oskar, who apparently suffered from long depressions and obsessive-compulsive disorder, committed suicide by shooting himself. The reasons for this are not entirely known, but Andersson was also known for his social anxiety, as well as incidents during his work as a reportage cartoonist, as he was exposed to severe mistreatment of military horses, which as an animal lover worsened his depression. Andersson is buried at Ekerö church cemetery.

Career

Andersson's best known strip, "Mannen som gör vad som faller honom in" was one of the first recurring comic strips in Swedish history. It was a 20-episode serial chronicling the misadventures of an anarchistic man who does whatever he wants, no matter how amoral it may be.

Other strips

Other cartooning works by Oskar Andersson include Urhunden, a strip about a prehistoric man and his pet dinosaur, and countless political satire cartoons. Among his contemporaries, Andersson was primarily known for his caricatures, which were published in Swedish newspapers Söndags-Nisse and Strix, between 1897–1906.