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Friday, April 17, 2009

The Big City or The New Mayhew


Searle's "London" book, used as a starting point Henry Mayhew's 'London Labour and London Poor'. Above is the artwork for the original edition released through Searle's own publishing outfit Perpetua.

The sketch below, in blue ink on the title-page, illustrates an elderly man up a ladder, pasting up a poster (the printed book title), inscribed "Embellished by Ronald for Jean, the right hand of Perpetua."
(From the collection of the late Jean Ellsmoor, who acted as Searle's secretary from 1956 to 1977.)
(The Big City or the New Mayhew, FIRST EDITION, AUTHOR'S PRESENTATION COPY, WITH ORIGINAL ILLUSTRATION, on the title-page, inscribed by author and illustrator, illustrations, publisher's cloth, dust-jacket, 4to, Perpetua, 1958)






'Alex Atkinson came up with the notion of inhabiting the style of Henry Mayhew, one of the Victorian founders of Punch, and producing a modern equivalent of his London Labour and the London Poor. There being less outright shocking squalor in mid-Fifties London-less interesting squalor, perhaps-Atkinson concentrated instead on a class more characteristic of the age: those pathetically defiant strugglers of inner-suburban bedsitter-land, where ambition finally learns to die . . .

. . . With few but striking exceptions, such as a most wondrously innocuous vicar, Searle's character-studies have in common a projecting lower lip that tells of stubborness giving way slowly to misery . . .




. . . The 'New Mayhew' pieces, later to be collected by Perpetua under the title The Big City, operate right on the line between humour and melancholy; textually and graphically, they tread it with a delicacy that now seems to belong as securely to the long-ago as Mayhew himself. To be made to laugh at the 'type', and yet feel sorry for the reality it stands for, is more than one expects from such a book'.

Ronald Searle by Russell Davies







A moving picture girl/page 25 The Big City/Budding actress' 

Punch, 2 May 1956.

Alex Atkinson and Ronald Searle, The Big City: or The New Mayhew, Perpetua Books, London, 1958, p25 








'Encyclopaedia Salesman'

Punch, 23 May 1956.

The Big City: or The New Mayhew, Perpetua Books, London, 1958, p.41




'The exile' 
pen and black ink and grey wash 

Punch & The Big City, London, 1958, p. 54




'A seller of ice-cream, nuts, etc.' 
pen and brown ink and brown wash

The Big City: of the New Mayhew, Perpetua Books, London, 1958, p. 81
Punch, 15 February 1958 issue.

'An Actress of Advancing Years'


(Thanks to Elliot Elam for contributing scans)

Wednesday, April 01, 2009

Achilles

While on a Greek theme here's Searle's cover illustration for Robert Graves' Homeric translation 'The Anger of Achilles'



The US edition had interior illustrations too.














An extract appeared in Harper's Bazaar 1959




Portrait of Graves, 1950

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Capsulysses

I had seen low quality scans of this strip online years ago & had always hoped to track down an original print to see it at high resolution. Ads & Ends found it amongst their Punch collection & were kind enough to donate it to this blog.

It's a four page strip which I'll post in sequence over the next few days, here's part 1.



Part 2


Part 3


Part 4

Wednesday, March 04, 2009


I found a great Ebay shop specializing in framed prints of Ronald Searle Punch cartoons. They're essentially pages from the magazine clipped out & framed. Just click on the Punch cartoons section in the left hand column or search for Ronald Searle. There are dozens of Searle's Punch Theatre caricatures on offer.

Tuesday, March 03, 2009

Happy Birthday Ronald Searle

Today is Mr Searle's 89th birthday! Before I left France I was over-joyed to receive a package from Mr Searle himself. When I met him last year he told me about the animated spots he made with Ivor Wood & would try to dig out the tape for me. As good as his word the tape arrived along with some photos from his archive. The photos relate to his time in New York & Hollywood in the 50s making Energetically Yours.

Above is a shot from his tour of the Disney studio that is previously un-published as far as I know. Walt must have been in a particularly jovial mood that day.

It's an honour to have Mr Searle effectively contributing to this blog! I told him about this site but I don't think he's online, although he did tell me to look for pen nibs on Ebay!

Friday, February 27, 2009

Hommage pt.2

Ken Turner made a series of interpretations of characters from BATMAN in Searle's style



Last year artists at Dreamworks Animation ran a 'Searle' character design class. The assignment was to draw characters from Flash Gordon or Conan in the style of Searle.


















If there are any other artists from the class who would like to contribute their Searle-esque designs please email me at the address in my Blogger profile.

Cheyenne Curtis made this fab St Trins girl


This Molesworth parody I found on Flickr but I've lost the name of the artist. Apologies. Perhaps someone can help identify him?

Here are the tribute pieces to mark Ronald Searle's death on the 30th December, 2011







Joe Corraro


Brian Ajhar

Conor McHale

Pedro Delgado




ST. Trinians style illustration for the London Evening Standard by Weef