Rescued from a South Australian tip, a battered , disintegrating , soiled 1904 copy of Phil May in Australia , being a collection of his outstanding and distinctive black and white drawings, which appeared in The Bulletin ,Sydney , was sent to this blog , some illustrations salvaged and run below . .
Although May, born Leeds,1864 was only in Australia from 1886-8, working for The Bulletin , he produced more than 900 drawings, some with pungent comments.
His important contribution to cartooning was acknowledged in the l950s by the influential Melbourne Art Training Institute which offered a course in commercial art . Its brochure said there was no better way to point out the faults of the world and humanity than by cartooning.
May covered the settling of Australian in a circa 1900 drawing depicting the centenary of the arrival of the first fleet in Sydney in 1788 .
It was captioned "Poor Pfella Me!" ... Whomever Australia is for, it is not for the Australian Aboriginal . It portrayed John Bull,on a plinth named Australia 1788-1888, delivering the boot to an Aborigine derisively named King Billy ; others in the group represent Germany , China , America and France.
Another related drawing had the caption : A Curiosity in Her Own Counry .
May commented on the Pacific with powerful drawings such as the following showing the "Angel of Civilisation " pouring rum on islanders.
It is evident that May enjoyed himself in Australia , which provided him with a lot of laughs , inspiration and entertainment . It is said that during his last few months in the country he was the life and soul of the Melbourne art circle .
However , back in London , in Fleet Street , at the height of his fame because of his Australian output , he reportedly said he was the most miserable man in town .
Randwick races and Republicans . |