Sunday, July 28, 2024

PROMINENT BRITISH WAR CARTOONIST

A  folder of  soiled  and  damaged  pencil  drawings  by  Thomas  Bert ,  MBE , who  drew for  the  British  Punch magazine and contributed  to  wartime propaganda ,   unearthed   in  South  Australia .  

Wikipedia  states  that  in  1918  Bert  became  nationally known for his cartoon "Arf a mo, Kaiser", drawn in ten minutes for the Smokes for Tommy Weekly Dispatch  campaign.

The cartoon raised nearly a quarter of a million pounds towards "comforts" (tobacco and cigarettes) for front line troops and the image was re-drawn and used during the Second World War with the caption "Arf a mo, 'itler".] The Germans banned the "Arf a mo, 'itler" cartoon and to ensure British prisoners did not have their comfort parcels confiscated, he created a variation with the caption "Are we downhearted?"

One of Bert's sons, Peter, also contributed to Punch. 

Three of the  21 drawings in the folder  shown below  illustrate Thomas Bert's  wide rang  of  subjects , beginning with a version  of  the Roman legend ,  the Rape of the Sabine  Women,  strangely  with  the  title  The  Raid   On  the  Sabine Women .


A noisy neighbour seems  to  have  inspired  the  following   artwork  then a  farrier  with  a  difficult  horse .


(Cartoons, War, Bert)