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Tuesday, January 21, 2014

The Railway Man

Ronald Searle's wartime sketches of his POW experience  feature in the new film 'The Railway Man' - based on Eric Lomax's account of his time on the Thai-Burma 'Death Railway'.  Directed by Jonathan Teplitzky and written by Frank Cottrell-Boyce, the film depicts scenes  of camp internment and jungle clearing straight out of Searle's sketches.  In one scene Nicole Kidman playing Lomax's wife picks up a copy of Searle's 'To the Kwai and Back' and flicks through the pages.






(Thanks to Tony Rosenast & Uli Meyer)


"An article by John Connell in Strand Magazine for October 1947 dealing with a subject Searle was sadly well able to illustrate - he himself had been a Japanese POW in the Second World War. This shows the scene in a camp hospital."
From Mike Ashworth's Flickr set


Thursday, January 09, 2014

Flu season!

A Get Well card by Searle should cheer you up!






You might even use a St Trinians hankerchief designed by Searle in 1954

Sunday, December 22, 2013

Merry Christmas

Here's a rare & expensive christmas present for Searle completists.  Available here and the following images sourced here




















Wednesday, December 18, 2013

Seasons Greetings

Amid Amidi at Cartoon Brew features the quirky Christmas card designs of Disney animator Ward Kimball.  Searle visited the Disney studio in 1957 and remained friendly with several of the animators including Kimball. Here is the animators' 1966 card to Ronald.



Kimball also sent this get well card to Monica Searle when he learnt of her cancer treatment.


Tuesday, December 10, 2013

'Searle In America' on Facebook

I've launched an official Facebook page for updates & info on the exhibition at the San Francisco Cartoon Art Museum HERE!

Tuesday, December 03, 2013

Another Searle exhibition!

Robert Forbes has one of the largest collections of original Searle artwork in the U.S. and several pieces in 'Searle In America' were generously loaned from the Forbes Gallery, NYC.  Mr Forbes collaborated with Searle on several books of poetry for children and now Forbes has 60 of the pictures on display in Palm Beach, Florida. Read this article for more details


"Forbes, who has been writing poetry for about 15 years, has three books with drawings by Searle. He was known as one of the world’s top illustrators until his death in 2011. Searle produced work for Life magazine, The New YorkerHoliday magazine, TV Guide and numerous British publications.
“I would send him three to six poems at a time,” Forbes said. “He never did preliminary sketches. Two or three months later, his package would arrive, and inside would be these glorious depictions of what was in my imagination and how he interpreted them and brought them to life. It’s rich, it’s whimsical, it’s silly, it’s lighthearted, it’s fun.”
Forbes said his fourth book with Searle needs about six more drawings. He plans to have another illustrator finish the book."

Monday, December 02, 2013

Exhibition reactions



"Visited the Cartoon Art Museum and got to pick this up! So crazy to see my work in print with so many other incredible artists! The Searle show was great" - Samantha Vilfort, contributing artist


"Members of the Advanced Character Design class I am taking at the Animation Collaborative (taught by Chris Sasaki) attended "Searle in America" at the Cartoon Art Museum in San Francisco. This show of Ronald Searle's work depicting American subjects is remarkable and a MUST for anyone breathing, let alone an interest in character or design. Matt Jones is responsible for this gem of a show and I have to say he did a perfect job bringing it all together. GO AND SEE THIS SHOW!" -Peter Emmerich,  contributing artist

SF Chronicle


Kenneth Baker, art critic at the San Francisco Chronicle, interviewed me about the exhibition. It appeared in the Thanksgiving edition.

'Countless Americans probably have seen the work of British cartoonist Ronald Searlewithout realizing it. People often confused it with that of prominent younger contemporaries Ralph Steadman and Gerald Scarfe, who salute Searle's influence.
Famous for wild-eyed drawings of cats, Searle (1920-2011) drew numerous illustrations for American periodicals, from TV Guide to theNew Yorker. He inspired even much younger contemporaries, including Matt Jones, who recently organized "Searle in America" at San Francisco's Cartoon Art Museum.
Born in Wales, Jones, 37, has lived in the Bay Area for a number years, working as a storyboard artist for Pixar. His admiration of Searle's art led Jones to set up a blog devoted to his art in 2008.
We discussed the exhibition by phone.

Q: When did you get interested in Searle?
A: Growing up in the U.K., it's sort of in the DNA of the culture. The St Trinian's girls were famous. They were these boarding-school girls Searle invented who went around tormenting their teachers and other students. Many things in those books were based on his experience as a prisoner of the Japanese in World War II.
Q: Did you meet Searle?
A: I got to know him a little bit, and he ended up contributing to the blog, and was very appreciative of it. ... He had a reputation like (Stanley) Kubrick of being a recluse, and seeking privacy at all costs. But to me, he couldn't have been more of an old-school gentleman, very hospitable, very generous, full of stories. I hope some of them will make it into the book I have planned. ... He didn't drive, so back in the heyday of magazines that would fly him first class all over the place to illustrate travel stories, his agent had to drive him thousands of miles.
Q: Do you find yourself imitating Searle's way of drawing?
A: I try not to, but once you've seen his work, you can't unsee it. He didn't mentor me as such, but he gave me pointers, and I have them in mind when I'm working. ... He's my Obi-Wan Kenobi. ... He used to caricature even buildings. ... You can see a razor-sharp satirical mind jabbing at the culture.

If you go

Searle in America: Through March 30. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Tuesday-Sunday. (Closed Thanksgiving.) $3-$7. Cartoon Art Museum, 655 Mission St., S.F. (415) 227-8666.www.cartoonart.org.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Happy Thanksgiving!

If you're looking for something to get you out of the house over the holiday go see 'Searle In America' at the Cartoon Art Museum, San Francisco

Saturday, November 16, 2013

'Searle In America' opens today!

'Searle In America' is now open at the Cartoon Art Museum, San Francisco.

The opening night went really well.  We auctioned the last of the fundraiser artwork items and raised another $3000 for the museum!

Federico Fiecconi, curator of the Bruno Bozzetto exhibition at the Walt Disney Family Museum dropped by.

Disney Feature Animation director John Musker was in San Francisco to be part of the panel discussion on Bruno Bozzetto.  He is a huge Searle fan and helped assemble some of the pieces in the exhibition.

Here's a sneak-peek at some of the pieces in the show




Here's the impeccable work graphic designer Susan Bradley did on the catalog.