Thursday 7 January 2016

Panel No.27: The House of Illustration

Panel 27: The House of Illustration

During the school Christmas holidays I finally managed to get along to The House of Illustration.

There! I just blurted it out! There was no easy way of breaking the news to the Cartoon Museum that I've been seeing other exhibitions behind its back.

(It's not you, Cartoon Museum. It's me. I'm a shameless gadabout for illustrated matter.)

The House of Illustration opened in July 2014 in the regenerated canal-side area behind King's Cross Station. It was founded by Sir Quentin Blake and 2016 will see a permanent Blake gallery added to the collection, opening in April. The theme of the first show will be Quentin Blake's approach to magic and surrealism.

Sir Quentin was born in Kent in 1932 and his first published work appeared in Punch when he was just 16. He studied art in London at both Chelsea and Camberwell and has illustrated more than 300 books.

He is internationally famed as the illustrator of Roald Dahl's books for children.

Such is the connection between Dahl and the illustrator who brought his characters so vividly to pictorial life that the mere mention of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory floods my mind's eye with Blake's work: those deliciously anarchic, scratchy lines, like a murder of crows splatting into a bucket of broken umbrellas. I cannot remember a time when I was not familiar with his work and I'm delighted to say that he's a big part of my eight-year-old daughter's reading experience too. 

At the opening of The House of Illustration, Blake told The Independent, "Illustration is all around us everywhere, but what I hope is that here you will stop and think about it."

The current exhibition certainly makes us do that – E.H Shepard: An Illustrator's War.

You are already familiar with the work of EH Shepard: he illustrated Winnie The Pooh and (my favourite) The Wind In the Willows



Toad screams for attention, of course, but just look at Ratty! One of the most stylish Englishmen of them all, worthy of a GQ cover all his own.


The long summer days of simply messing about in boats are in high contrast to Shepard's first-hand experience of World War One.





Over 100 drawings are on display depicting scenes on the Western Front, cartoons and, most touchingly, letters home to his wife featuring tender illustrations.

Here's illustrator & cartoonist Chris Riddell (the current Children's Laureate, a post once held by Sir Quentin Blake) with a few words on the exhibition…




(If the widget is unresponsive click HERE: www.youtube.com)

Running in tandem with the Shephard exhibition is Lauren Child's Dolls' House in the South Gallery.



Child is the creator of Charlie and Lola, the tales of young Charlie, the coolest most fantastic-est big brother in the world ever ever ever and his little sister Lola who, by Charlie's reckoning, is "Small and VERY funny." It's no lie.

In an earlier post in this series I stated that you DON'T need to use a child as a beard to love cartoons and the work of Lauren Child is a great case in point, vivid and life-affirming stuff for all ages.


Child's dolls' house is a 30-year work-in-progress and, as pointed out on The House of Illustration website, the miniature construction techniques she learned as a child continue to inform her illustration practice today.

Here she is introducing her dolls' house on the BBC Radio4 programme Today… www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/p036m97h)


Given that my context in this series is cartoons in London, I completely must point you in the direction of Lauren Child's Charlie and Lola: We Must Completely Go To London.



You only really need two guide books to London. This is one of them, the other is M Sasek's This Is London (click here for an earlier post on that great book).


Buy Charlie and Lola: We Must Completely Go To London here:  www.amazon.co.uk


There are only got a few weeks left to check out these two exhibitions, E.H Shephard: An Illustrator's War closes on the 24th January while Lauren Child's Dolls' House runs to the 6th February.


From the 5th February, the main gallery will host Comix Creatrix: 100 Women Making Comics. here's the blurb…


Explore the world of comics through original artwork by 100 women comic creators working across genres and generations - from the 1800s to the present day; from observational comedy to surreal fantasy, challenging biography to subversive dissent.

Featuring artists from Marie Duval and Tove Jansson to Posy Simmonds, Audrey Niffenegger and Nina Bunjevac, Comix Creatrix: 100 Women Making Comics is the UK's largest ever exhibition of leading female comic artists.


You can book at the House of Illustration website here: www.houseofillustration.org.uk



The House of Illustration…

2 Granary Square,

Kings Cross, 

London N1C 4BH







I've collected the entire series of A Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London so far together on its own dedicated blog at cartoonandcomicbooklondon.blogspot.co.uk



Today, the 7th January 2016, I've re-posted a piece on the timing and the process of the series on the first anniversary of Charlie Hebdo. You can catch up with it at cartoonandcomicbooklondon.blogspot.co.uk

Tuesday 5 January 2016

A Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London: One Year On

It's January 2016 and one year on from the commencement of my blog A Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London – a series of posts building into a "virtual tour" of London in cartoons and illustrations. The series first appeared on The Daily Constitutional, the blog I write & edit for the award-winning walking tour company London Walks

The timing of the series haunts me yet as, on the day I sat down to blog about a particularly violent comic book set in London, the news of the Charlie Hebdo atrocity came through.

In March 2015, as I neared the end of the initial 20-post run of the series, I blogged the post below explaining a bit about why I had started the series, about how its direction was changed by Charlie Hebdo, about why cartoons are so important to me and about why I decided to carry on blogging about them on that awful January day on which Ian Hislop, editor of Private Eye, so memorably said, "Very little seems funny today."

Thanks for reading my blog. Perhaps one of these days I'll get around to donning my London Walks guide hat and turn the thing into a proper walking tour. In the meantime, I've got posts lined up – the series has expanded WAY beyond its initial 20-post lifespan – for 2016 on Wonder Woman, Cruikshank, The House of Illustration, political cartoons, The Simpsons, Punch, Gillray and more. 

A.S-G, East Finchley, London. January 2015


The following post first appeared on the Daily Constitutional in March 2015…


The idea behind my Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London, which I began on this blog back in January this year, was really very simple: to marry my jobs as a London Walks tour guide and editor of The Daily Constitutional with my love of cartoons. It was timed as an enjoyable way for me to start the year.


Ah, timing.


As I typed part three back on the 7th January 2015 – a blog post looking at Über, the gory, ongoing alternate WWII history comic by Kieron Gillen & Canaan White – the news of the Charlie Hebdo atrocity came crashing in from Paris.

It suddenly seemed an inappropriate moment to be blogging about cartoons

In light of events, and the particularly bloody subject I had chosen to blog about that day, I decided to spike the story. Or whatever the blogging equivalent of that bygone verb may be – I suppose we would click "save as draft", rather than spike the story, which doesn't have nearly the same drama.

As I watched the story unfold online I found myself becoming more and more upset. More so than I had been on the day of the 7th July attacks right here in my own city ten years ago. More even than the day that the nail bomber struck in the heart of Soho. This seemingly distant attack, some 200-and-more miles from my home city, in another country, felt inexplicably close to home. Was it because I am a journalist by trade that the story was hitting so deeply?

As I watched on my computer screen, the desk at which I sat was littered with the pencils, inking-in pens and drawing pads that I had been using with my 7-year-old daughter just the night before. 

The 7th January is a date I will never forget.

***

The date I can't remember, however, is when I stopped drawing my own cartoons.

Don't get me wrong: I'm not suggesting that the flag above the Tate Modern should be flown at half-mast, or anything. It's just that somewhere down the line, sometime in my 20s, I stopped drawing. I stopped and didn't touch a pencil for the best part of two decades.

Then my daughter came along.

Like most kids, she loves to draw. It's what she loves to do almost to the exclusion of everything else. To the extent that she even views it as an acceptable alternative to playing on a screen.

And so I drew with her. And it felt like waking up refreshed from a heavy sleep.

All children love cartoons – and a fairly large percentage of their parents use their children as an excuse to love cartoons, too.

I will never have to do this. I learned long ago, at my father's knee that one needn't employ a child as a beard to enjoy cartoons.

My father would roar his head off laughing at cartoons. Wild laughter. Unseemly. Infectious. Ludicrous behaviour for a grown-man. 

He often went on record to say how suspicious he was of people who didn't find cartoons funny. He's been dead the best part of ten years now, but I'm still pretty happy to use his cartoon test as a moral compass for life. It has seldom let me down.



A popular family legend tells of him as a young man – young, but, crucially, full-grown – being forcibly ejected from the local cinema in our hometown. He always insisted that the reason for his being thrown-out was for "Laughing too loud at the Looney Tunes." That was his story and he stuck to it all his born days. I suspect there was more to it than that, and that alcohol was involved somewhere down the line. But those who ever endured the cartoons with him in a cinema have often corroborated at least part of his alibi. "He was," one old friend of his said, still cringing at the memory, "an embarrassment."

Having been ejected into the cold night and bent on revenge, my dad and his pals lifted the cinema manager's car – a tiny 1950s bubble car – into the foyer of the picture house and left it there. A Looney Tunes-inspired act of vengeance that could only have been bettered if they'd placed a rake flat on the floor for the cinema manager to stand on, with an anvil hanging by a thread above it.

(I can empathise. If you'd like your life to become a raging sea, just try interrupting me when I'm watching Daffy Duck or Road Runner.)

When my grandfather died we found among his personal effects a cartoon pressed between the pages of a book. 

It was on a piece of notepaper and my father said he remembered the day it was drawn. It depicted a leering Hitler holding an olive branch out to Stalin… only the olive branch was wrapped around a barbarous-looking dagger.

It refers either to the signing of the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact of 1939, bringing a brittle peace between Nazi Germany and Soviet Russia, or to the breaking of that pact with the Nazi invasion of Russia in 1941. There is no date on the drawing, but my father said he remembered his father sitting down to draw it. And remembered it vividly.

Whether it is a copy from a newspaper of the day or an invention of my grandfather's I have been unable to ascertain, but what strikes me today is that my father would have been somewhere between six- and eight-years-old when it was drawn. Roughly the same age as my daughter is now. And all those years later, the memory of his father drawing remained.

If, when I am long-gone, someone should ever ask my daughter to describe her daft old dad, I would be a happy man if she said: "When he wasn't being a grumpy old so-and-so, he liked drawing and he liked laughing."

It seemed that the events of the 7th January 2015 were not so distant after all – they resonated through cartoons down four generations from my grandfather (who, in a nice cartoony footnote, was built like Desperate Dan) to my daughter.




I turned to the cartoonists of 2015. We are blessed in this country that the world of the political cartoon is completely Old Fart Proof – no one can gripe that cartoons were better in the olden days with the wealth of talent on display here every day. Steve Bell, Martin Rowson, Chris Riddell and Peter Brookes put the boot in from all sides of the political spectrum. All our cartoonists, from The Daily Telegraph to The Guardian acquitted themselves powerfully and responsibly that day, but Mr Bell's response in The Guardian was a stand-out, full of clear-headed rage, eloquence and bleak humour – you can view it HERE

Martin Rowson chimed in with an inspirational piece on how despots despise mockery and how those "who would place themselves above us" are challenged and undermined by our laughter. I've read it over-and-over again this year and it is rapidly becoming one of my all-time favourite pieces of journalism. (I blogged about it HERE.)

One aspect of his piece, however, only served to deepen the despair. I was shocked to learn that Mr Rowson has long been the recipient of death threats from those who find his cartoons objectionable. Perhaps that was naive of me. This new despair was in some measure lifted by Rowson's own courage in remaining defiant…


"After the murders of the Charlie Hebdo cartoonists Cabu, Wolinski, Tignous and the paper’s editor-in-chief, Stéphane Charbonnier – who signed himself “Charb” – there’s a terrible temptation to stop laughing. Although that, I believe, would be a fundamental error.

Laughter, it needs to be shouted, is one of the things humans do best, mostly because it makes us feel better. I’ve been convinced for years that laughter is a hardwired evolutionary survival mechanism that helps humans navigate our way through life without going mad with existentialist terror. That’s why we laugh at all those terrifying things like death, sex, other people and the disgusting stuff that pours out of our bodies on a daily basis.



Back when I was six, my dad asked me what I wanted to do when I grew up. I told him I wanted to be a cartoonist. I wonder what he would have advised if he'd known that I'd grow into a world where it's a good day for a cartoonist if he manages to get back home from his desk alive with only the threat of murder hanging over him.

He simply said what he always did. "Well to be a cartoonist you have to stick in at the school." He was a motor mechanic and "sticking in at the school" (i.e. applying oneself to lessons and study) was big with him.

It was also the big advice given to me by the first proper cartoonist I ever met – the late, truly great John Grant. John Grant was the writer and illustrator of the Littlenose stories which were so popular on TV's Jackanory programme. 




Littlenose was a Neanderthal boy who was always getting into scrapes (that's him above, with the little nose, of course). Grant visited our school and when I asked him how I could do his job, he replied, in that wonderful musical voice that he had, "Stick in at your lessons and then go to art school."

Art school? This was new information: a school dedicated entirely to art? Where you didn't have to do sums? Could such places be? The notion was so glorious to me that I half-suspected that he was pulling my leg.

Perhaps my dubiety was the reason that it took me so long to follow his advice – the best part of 40 years, in fact.

Last year I joined the Crash Course in Cartooning course at the Cartoon Museum, taught by the peerless Steve Marchant



Steve is not only an expert cartoonist, he's also an inspirational teacher. With his fantastic and outrageous mohawk haircut he even looks like a cartoon. The great glory of his course was being able to watch someone do exactly what they were put on this earth to do – his work is effortless. Yet he does it in such a way that makes you want to have a go, too. Although it was billed as being the very basics of cartooning, he switched the lights on for me in areas of the cartoonist's art that would have been as inaccessible to me without his guidance as the remains of Glenn Miller's plane. Moreover, he taught us with a natural cartoonist's sense of economy and a great sense of fun.


Perhaps this VERY long blog post could take a leaf out of his book?


On the 7th January 2015 I had to decide whether to continue with a blog series about cartoons and cartooning – not really the world's biggest decision, on the face of it, on that or any other day.

I thought of my dad who loved cartoons and also spat hilarious, free-spoken political opinions even on his deathbed (opinions so scabrous that even cyberspace would blush).

I thought of my grandfather as a 27-year-old coal miner and father-of-three, under skies soon-to-be darkened with bombers, who made sense of it all by picking up a pen and drawing.

I thought of my daughter who is still very much in the "But why?" stage of life, who loves to draw and hold forth.

With my grandfather, Martin Rowson, Hitler, Daffy Duck, my dad, Scooby Doo, Steves Marchant and Bell, David Low, Kieron Gillen, John Grant, Charb and my seven-year-old daughter all whirling around me like the famous scene out of Fantasia (the scene that makes you disappointed that the whole movie isn't in cartoon form)… I blogged about Private Eye and the series moved on.

Me, my daughter, my dad as a boy, Hitler, my granddad drawing, Martin Rowson, Daffy Duck, Steve Bell, Steve Marchant, Charb, Kieron Gillen and Scooby Doo




In the end, I've had a lot of fun blogging about cartoons and cartoonists in London – even if the backdrop of the times has been a disturbing one. There was yet another twist in the tale as, with the series drawing to a close, Steve Bell stirred up a hornets' nest of anger north of the border with his If… cartoon strip. As a Scot I was asked if I found Bell's portrayal of Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon in any way racist. Last year I would have mumbled and mangled the quote misattributed to Voltaire about defending Steve Bell's right to draw whatever the bugger he likes. Given the times, I had only one answer: Je Suis Steve Bell.

Anita at the Cartoon Museum has been more than helpful with this series, as has Camila and the friendly staff at Orbital Comics, so big thanks are due there. It was also lovely to be reTweeted by the creators of the comic book Metroland (see Panel 18 of the tour). Best of all was the moment when I hit a professional high spot of my journalistic career: my work was reTweeted by The Beano.

I hope you've enjoyed following my Cartoon & Comic Book Tour of London – the series ends tomorrow with Panel 20 dedicated to a pair of very fine Willies indeed: William Hogarth and Willie Rushton


Adam Scott-Goulding
London


March 2015