Nipper
          
          Friends 
            of Nipper
           
          Nipper 
            - A unique star in the history of talking machines
          By Doug Boilesen
           
             
               
            
          
          Nipper was a a terrier whose lineage 
            is commonly thought to be a mix of Fox and Bull Terrier. But his pedigre 
            didn't matter. It was his curiousity and famous pose as he listened 
            to sounds from a machine that epitomized what this new wonder was 
            introducing to the world. 
          Born in 1884 in Bristol, England, 
            Nipper was painted listening to a phonograph in late 1898 three years 
            after Nipper's death. The original painting by Francis Barraud displayed 
            an Edison-Bell Phonograph as the source of Nipper's interest. In 1898 
            Barraud repainted the Phonograph with a Berliner Gramophone and it 
            was this painting that would become the trademark for Eldridge Johnson's 
            Victor Talking Machine Company (which Johnson took over from Emile 
            Berliner). 
          With his ear cocked sitting in 
            front of a talking machine listening to "His Master's Voice," Nipper 
            would be seen in countless advertisements into the 21st century and 
            far outlive the Victor and its generation of listeners. 
          It is one of the great advertising 
            ironies that the dog that couldn't find a home with the Edison Phonograph 
            went on to become one of the most famous marketing images of all time, 
            doing so for Edison's chief competitor, the Victor Talking Machine 
            Company. 
           
          
           
           
          On February 11, 1899, Francis 
            filed an application for copyright of this painting “Dog Looking At 
            and Listening to a Phonograph.” 
          According to Leonard Petts, author 
            of The story of 'Nipper' and the 'His Master's Voice' picture painted 
            by Francis Barraud, negotiations for the transfer of the copyright 
            of the repainted picture with the Gramophone " were completed 
            with Barraud by 31st January 1900 and on 6th February the Company 
            applied for a Memorandum of the Assignment of Copyright of the painting 
            of Dog looking into and listening to a Gramophone and entitled His 
            Master's Voice." 
          Nipper made his first appearance 
            on the Gramophone Company's advertising literature on the Record Supplement 
            for January 1900.
          The original painting (below) 
            by Francis Barraud, Nipper's owner and brother of the original owner, 
            displayed an Edison Phonograph as the subject talking machine. 
          The following photograph shows 
            the 1899 update where Barraud has repainted the Phonograph as a Berliner 
            Gramophone. 
           
           
          Nipper listening to an Edison Phonograph
           
           
           
          The repainted HMV 
            version with Nipper and a Berliner Gramophone
           
           Since Nipper became 
            such an icon in the advertising world it's not surprising that there 
            are many examples of "art", cartoons and parody that feature 
            Nipper as the star. 
          To see a few of these 
            Nipper inspired works go to Phonographia's PhonoArt gallery "Nipper 
            Art". 
           
           
           
          