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Monday, March 21, 2011

Morbid Anatomies

Perhaps inspired by this 1950 Lilliput illustration Searle's 'Morbid Anatomies' first appeared in Holiday magazine












HOLIDAY magazine February 1958

HOLIDAY magazine April 1961



Searle's agent was forced to threaten legal action when the series was later ripped off for a print campaign advertising London Fog overcoats.   Vogue Magazine was good enough to commission the artist himself to produce this variation. . .


. . . as was HOLIDAY magazine.


"I found this Ronald Searle illustration, which accompanies a tongue-in-cheek article on Southern mores and manners by North Carolina–born author Frances Gray Patton, in the November 1959 issue of Holiday magazine. . ."


http://southernontheinside.wordpress.com/2010/11/01/morbid-anatomy-of-a-southern-belle/#comment-254
Anatomy of an Antiquarian Bookseller


'Anatomy of an Amateur Golfer' 
Travel & Leisure Magazine 1972

The Morbid Anatomy was subsequently appropriated by other cartoonists.
Cartoon Museum, London

Wednesday, March 16, 2011

Updates


Added some rare early colour examples to the Lilliput blog
(courtesy of the comprehensive Fulltable website)
See more colour images from Lilliput here

The British Museum has finally started to put its archive online.  You can now view excellent images of Searle's Rake's Progress series here .
Readers may recall my visit to the Drawings & Prints room to photograph the originals.









Added a rare early dustjacket to the bookcover section

Added LBJ to the Political Portraits section

Published the Energetically Yours section

Wednesday, March 09, 2011

Champagne!


'Hanover, Germany  - The British cartoonist Ronald Searle, who has lived in the south of France for the past three decades, has sold a lifetime of original drawings to a German museum, the museum said Wednesday.
Searle's spiky cartoons have been a fixture in the news media, books and films for more than six decades.
The Wilhelm Busch Museum of Caricature and Drawing in Hanover is to mount a first exhibition, spanning 75 years of his work, later this month, Gisela Vetter-Liebenow, deputy museum director, said.
She said Searle, 91, and his wife Monica had been paid just under 1 million euros (1.4 million dollars) by the Lower Saxony state culture fund for more than 2,000 sketches, 50 books of drawings and lithographs. The British Museum in London also holds Searle work.
"He's still drawing," said Vetter-Liebenow.
The sale of literary papers includes drawings he did on a 1961 assignment for US magazine Life of the trial of Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem.'


www.earthtimes.org


Ronald Searle stresses that the 1 million euro sale has actually been in the form of an ongoing 'pension' payment to him and Monica.  Awarded by the Lower Saxony cultural foundation for Ronald's long association with the museum (since around 1960).


I just stumbled upon this article from the AOI's Derek Brazell, where Ronald mentions the Wilhelm-Busch museum.


AOI Patron, Ronald Searle, would never lay claim to this himself, but he is one of the most influential illustrators the UK has produced, and has esteemed illustrators like Ralph Steadman, Posy Simmons, Steve Bell and Gerald Scarfe lining up to pay tribute to him and his work. His work has encompassed everything from sensitive depictions of refugees to the hilarious out of control St Trinian's schoolgirls. AOI's Derek Brazell visited Ronald and his wife Monica in April to interview him for an upcoming book Making Great Illustration. They live in a picturesque hilltop village in the south of France, where they have been resident since the sixties, and were charmingly welcoming, breaking out the famous pink champagne 'engine-oil'!
Ronald spoke about how professional he believed the AOI was and how much he liked Varoom magazine, as well as covering his thoughts on illustration and how he puts his artwork together. He also spoke about his work held at the Wilhelm-Busch-Museum in Hannover, 'What they wanted was the possibility to have the whole archive of one person that they could actually open to the public to show how one illustrator would work. So I’m leaving all my archive, and all my basic stuff to them, which is protected under German law, can never be split up, must be available to the public. If by any chance the museum closed it belongs to the German state and must go to another museum. Fantastic.'
From the AOI website
Ronald and Monica Searle at the museum in 2001 for their joint exhibition Searle and Searle.  Monica had her hand-made jewelry designs on display.

Thursday, March 03, 2011

HAPPY 91st BIRTHDAY RONALD!

To celebrate Ronald's 91st let's take a look back at last years' celebratory exhibitions for his 90th.  For those who couldn't make it to London here's a birthday treat.  The highlight was the Cartoon Museum's retrospective curated by Anita O Brien with the collaboration of Ronald and Monica Searle and Steve Bell.
Featuring hundreds of choice pieces it was heaven for Searle fans!
















The rabbit featured in Wendy Toye's production of 'Wild Thyme' (1955)





Across town at Chris Beetles' gallery they were celebrating with an extensive retrospective too.  Some pieces were on loan from the collections of Searle fans but most were available to purchase.













"Objects of worship I should imagine"



Friday, February 25, 2011

Hullo clouds, hullo sky

The U.K.'s top medical journal The Lancet review Mrs Mole:


For the young Ronald Searle, art was a means of survival. Held in appalling conditions as a prisoner of war in southeast Asia between 1942 and 1945, he drew scenes of camp life with whatever materials were to hand, hiding his work under the mattresses of cholera victims to avoid discovery.
Against the odds, Searle endured and went on to enjoy a remarkably long and varied career. Perhaps best known for St Trinian'sand Molesworth, his drawings have appeared in innumerable books, newspapers, magazines, and advertisements. Guardiancartoonist Steve Bell has described Searle's work as “the highest form of conceptual art, but devoid of any of the pretence that usually accompanies such a notion. Which is to say it is extremely funny, but not all the time. It cuts to the essence of life.”

The essence of life is the subject of Les Très Riches Heures de Mrs Mole. Its title is a play on Les Très Riches Heures du Duc du Berry, the 15th-century book of hours that illustrates the milestones of the year. Every one of Searle's 47 pictures represents a milestone, too: they were produced to mark each chemotherapy session that his wife, Monica, had after her diagnosis with breast cancer in 1969. These images were never intended for publication or display; Searle brought them to his wife's bedside in Paris, whilst their new house in Provence was renovated. During building work, the Searles had made the unexpected discovery of an extensive cellar. Combining this subterranean world with Monica's nickname—“Mo”—Searle created his wife's alter ego, Mrs Mole.
Mrs Mole is a round, happy creature whose snout curves naturally into a smile. She is mostly seen in a patchwork apron; she has a bob of black hair, and her green eyes are framed by dark lashes. In Searle's depiction of her day-to-day life, Monica's medical treatment is only alluded to obliquely. In one charming image, a white rabbit, equipped with a doctor's bag (labelled “First Rabbit Aid”), binds up an injury on Mrs Mole's foot. Yet the experience of illness, and the physical restrictions it brings, is central to the drawings. Informed by his own experience of ill-health and curtailed freedom, Searle constructed an existence Monica could enjoy vicariously. “I would lie in bed”, she later said, “living the life he created in the pictures”. It is a life consisting of simple, mainly solitary pleasures. Mrs Mole sweeps the floor, swims, sews, gathers flowers, and enjoys tea on the terrace. The images celebrate the things Monica enjoyed before her illness and anticipate future pleasures. In one picture, Mrs Mole waters a cedar Searle and his wife planned to plant in the garden; in another, she sips champagne, a daily indulgence Searle promised himself during his days of incarceration, and which, it was hoped, Monica would one day enjoy again.
These drawings are some of Searle's best work. His use of colour is bold and assured. It is reminiscent, at times, of those other artists inspired by the landscape of Provence: Vincent van Gogh, Raoul Dufy, and Paul Cézanne. The most striking images are those of spring; and this may be because, with their budding flowers and emerging butterflies, these are the pictures that represent new hope. The final picture is not part of the main series: it forms a sort of epilogue. 16 June 1967—16 June 1975. The Beautiful Dream—Come True xxx was produced just before the Searles took up permanent residence in Provence. Mr Mole, in patchwork trousers, stands with open arms, preparing to catch his wife as she falls from the sky; it is as if Heaven has returned her. There really was a happy ending to the Searles' story. Monica beat the odds and survived her cancer. Now aged 85, she and Ronald, 90, live in their house in Provence where he continues to enjoy—and draw inspiration from—pink champagne. The planned cedar never took, despite two attempts. A sturdy fig tree, however, sprung up in its place, and continues to flourish. Rich hours indeed.

Saturday, February 19, 2011

Ronald Searle cartoons go on show to help breast cancer charities

Private drawings he created while his wife suffered from the disease will be on display at Cartoon Museum in London

Maev Kennedy The Guardian Monday 14 February 2011


 
Monica and Ronald Searle at home in France. Photograph: Eamonn McCabe for the Guardian


Cheerful Mrs Mole pottered happily around her idyllic home, stitching patchwork, making cakes, stirring pots, arranging flowers, at an absolutely gruesome time in the lives of the cartoonist Ronald Searle and his wife, Monica.The complete collection of Mrs Mole drawings, created by Searle and intended as private, bittersweet jokes never meant for publication, will go on display at the Cartoon Museum in London this week.
In 1969, Monica was diagnosed with breast cancer and given only a few months to live. She was offered a course of what in those days was seen as an experimental form of chemotherapy. Searle, regarded by his peers as the greatest living cartoonist, recalls his reaction: "I had only my talent for drawing ... so I drew."

He gave her the Mrs Mole drawings as she lay in her hospital bed in Paris, one for each of her treatments, showing Monica's alter ego cheerful and busy in a setting heavily based on their own home in a village in Provence.
The drawings were full of details from their domestic life: her grandmother also pottered about carrying a basket of keys, and in the renovation of their own house they had recently discovered a bundle of huge, ancient keys. Monica recalled: "I would lie in bed, living the life he created in the pictures."
She was pronounced clear of the cancer in 1975, and today they still live in Mrs Mole's beautiful house.
Searle, whose first published drawings recall the three and a half years he survived in a Japanese prisoner of war camp, and who went on to create the hellish schoolgirls from St Trinians and the immortal Nigel Molesworth, has been awarded a CBE in Britain and the Legion d'Honneur in his adopted home in France. He is a trustee of the Cartoon Museum, which mounted a retrospective last year to mark his 90th birthday.
The museum is working with breast cancer charities on the exhibition, which runs until 20 March.
Image courtesy of Ronald Searle




More Mrs Mole herehere and here


Brian Sibley on Mrs Mole here