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Showing posts with label War Cartoons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label War Cartoons. Show all posts

Friday, May 8, 2015

Illingworth’s Genius on VE Day 1945

    
1945 [1] Illingworth’s VE Day cartoon, Daily Mail, 8 May.

TODAY is the day of Victory Europe in England, VE Day 70. Seventy years ago Hitler and the Nazis were defeated by the Allies, and London went out on the street again free. World War II was finally won. 

L.G. ILLINGWORTH, Welsh-born staff artist of the Daily Mail, published a memorable cartoon that day. He had drawn war cartoons for years, especially in Punch and the Daily Mail, and he knew long before that liberation day would come. 

1945 [2] It’s all over… The VE Day front-page of the London Daily Mail, No. 15,290 of Tuesday 8 May, price: one penny. Illingworth’s large cartoon is on the reverse, on page 2.
Enjoy Illingworth’s wartime genius!

1944 [3] Christmas 1944 in the US. Americans are busy shopping. By Illingworth, 23 December.
1945 [4] The war in Poland. By Illingworth, 15 January.
1940s [5] Leslie Gilbert Illingworth (1902-79), a little self-portrait.
1939 [6] “Why not an offensive today?…” By Illingworth, 2 November.
1939 [7] “Why so startled, Fuhrer? Don’t you recognize one of your first members of the party?…” By Illingworth, 10 November.
1940 [8] Neutrality. By Illingworth, 22 January.
1940 [9] A surprise for breakfast. By Illingworth, 27 January.
1940 [10] Careless listening costs lives. By Illingworth, 27 March — “with apologies to Fougasse.”
1943 [11] The Dogs of War. By Illingworth, 2 September.
1943 [12] Where is Hitler? By Illingworth, 15 March.
1943 [13] Donkeys spread rumours. By Illingworth, 11 September.
1944 [14] Here lies the German general staff. By Illingworth, 6 October.
1944 [15] Hitler’s special excursion to victory. By Illingworth, 31 July.
1950s [16] Leslie Gilbert Illingworth, self-portrait on scraperboard.
1970s [17] Little self-portrait.

The genius of Illingworth is best illustrated in the 4,563 cartoons held in The National Library of Wales (most of the pictures shown above come from it), an incredible collection, for the larger part original art, HERE — just start searching for ‘Illingworth.’

See Tony Robinson’s Victory in Europe, a brand new documentary on Discovery Channel, HERE.

And see VE Day in numbers, HERE.


Thanks to Brian Hughes from
Surbiton, Surrey (1937-2010),
who cut out and saved Illingworth’s 
Daily Mail’s VE Day cartoon
as a young lad. 

Reported by Huib van Opstal.

Friday, July 13, 2012

W.A. Rogers – “Greatest of Present Day Cartoonists”


The Announcement.
Between 17 April, 1917, until 15 November, 1918, W.A. Rogers was one of the executive members of the Division of Pictorial Publicity of the Committee on Public Information set up under George Creel for propaganda purposes during World War I. The cartoons produced for newspapers were probably more effective than the graphic posters designed. Newspapers were read in the millions every day.

Rogers’ war cartoons were beautifully rendered in brush and pen but seem rather false and staged to modern eyes. His villains (see the one above) were straight from the melodrama, and his ‘pirate’ metaphor for the Germans is contrived. Rogers also supplied cartoons on the “Belgian atrocities but he was not as successful as the Dutchman Louis Raemaekers.

William Allen Rogers (1854-1931) did have an amazing background, however, first as a cartoonist and illustrator at Harper’s Weekly, then as a muckraking editorial cartoonist for the New York Herald, where his best work was to appear. Even further back he said that he believed he “drew the first syndicated cartoons ever published in this country” – and that was in 1868! “An enterprising Daytonian bearing the unlovely name of Gump, conceived the idea of a syndicate service of cartoons and I was the ‘art department.’ ” Rogers drew his syndicate cartoons in pen and ink on woodblocks.

*TOP: from America’s Black and White Book, One Hundred Pictured Reasons Why We Are At War, by W.A. Rogers, New York: Cupples and Leon Company [c. 1917]

William Allen Rogers – The veteran cartoonist
 of Harper’s Weekly, 1904 photo
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‘William Allen Rogers, Greatest of Present Day Cartoonists,’ by Perriton Maxwell, from Pearson’s Magazine, Vol. XXII, Number 5, November 1909, pp. 689-698 & 2

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Christmas Night.

Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Before the War



It's interesting to look though a years worth of editorial cartoons day by day. These cartoons are all from the Montreal Gazette in the year preceding WWII -- 1938 and 1939. All the great villains of the 20th century are here, Hitler, Stalin, and Mussolini. The cartoons are by the Englishman David Low, Canadian John Collins, Thomas (Bert Thomas?) and a Popeye knock-off by Britisher Sidney Strube. The top cartoon is from January 11, the last cartoon is from Jan 1 1940.