Wednesday, September 30, 2009
Monday, September 14, 2009
Radio Times
I've fallen behind posting material that contributors have sent me. Many thanks to Matthew Davis who sent these scans of Searle's early career work for Radio Times magazine. He collated them from various retrospectives of Radio Times art published over the years.
Apparently this one set in the cemetery was specifically assigned to Searle because of his “Paris Sketchbook”.
RADIO TIMES - JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 1947 RONALD SEARLE - ODD MAN OUT COVER
Apparently this one set in the cemetery was specifically assigned to Searle because of his “Paris Sketchbook”.
RADIO TIMES - JUNE 29 - JULY 5, 1947 RONALD SEARLE - ODD MAN OUT COVER
". . . During the Second World War, Searle was captured by Japanese forces in Singapore and from 1942 was kept as a prisoner at Changi, where he was forced to work on the Burma railway by day but by night secretly continued his cartoons.
He created St Trinian's while a prisoner and though he had been drawing professionally since he left school, it was after the war that his career brought him fame - and then in 1947 the accolade of drawing the Christmas cover for Radio Times.
His work for Radio Times included many sketches accompanying dramas such as the first play by John Galsworthy, best known now for The Forsyte Saga, in 1948 and productions of John Steinbeck's Of Mice and Men in 1949. But he also illustrated documentaries and talks, of which the most striking was 1947's The Enigma of the Japanese (left): Searle drew the Radio Times billing and appeared in the programme itself to discuss his wartime captivity.
Searle's drawings were collected in The Art of Radio Times, published in 1981, and many of his wartime pieces are held at the Imperial War Museum in London."
-William Gallagher, 03 January 2012
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)