RONALD SEARLE, CBE (BORN 1920)

RONALD SEARLE - 'OK MAKE IT A BOLLINGER '29' RONALD SEARLE - THE PANTOMIME HORSE RONALD SEARLE - MR LEMON HART EARWIG CATCHING IN THE GARDEN
RONALD SEARLE - PRECIOUS OBJECTS RONALD SEARLE - ANCIENT AND MODERN RONALD SEARLE - JEAN COCTEAU
RONALD SEARLE - ROWLAND EMETT (1906-1990) AT THE FESTIVAL OF BRITAIN RONALD SEARLE - SPIES RONALD SEARLE - THE OLD MAN AND THE PRIZE
RONALD SEARLE - FABRIC TIE REMOVED RONALD SEARLE - MIAMI RONALD SEARLE - THE CENCI
RONALD SEARLE - OBJECTS OF WORSHIP, I SHOULD IMAGINE... RONALD SEARLE - ISRECKO DIMITRIYEVICH, SAN ANTONIO CAMP, SALERNO RONALD SEARLE - DR HEWLETT JOHNSON, THE 'RED DEAN' OF CANTERBURY (1874-1966)
RONALD SEARLE - SEARLE'S-EYE VIEW NO 17: IRIS MURDOCH RONALD SEARLE - SEARLE'S-EYE VIEW, NO 29: ALFRED HITCHCOCK RONALD SEARLE - SEARLE'S-EYE VIEW NO 32: BRENDAN BEHAN
RONALD SEARLE - ALAN DENT RONALD SEARLE - JULIUS CAESARBRUTUS...PAUL ROGERS, MARC ANTONY...JOHN NEVILLE - PUNCH THEATRE, EDINBURGH FESTIVAL RONALD SEARLE - RALPH RICHARDSON AND PAUL SCHOFIELD
RONALD SEARLE - PUNCH THEATRE - THE HOUSE BY THE LAKE BY HUGH MILLS - MAURICE...ANDREW CRUICKSHANK - JANET...FLORA ROBSON - DUKE OF YORKS RONALD SEARLE - PICKING HOLLY RONALD SEARLE - SLIGHT SPLITTING OF PASTE-DOWNS
RONALD SEARLE - FILM PUBLICITY: WELCOME TO A FILM PERSON RONALD SEARLE - FOR A VALENTINE RONALD SEARLE - GREAT LIES OF THE PAST: CLEANLINESS IS NEXT TO GODLINESS
RONALD SEARLE - O BEE MYE VALENTYNE RONALD SEARLE - GREAT MOMENTS IN MUSIC - THE ROLLING STONES ARE STILL AT IT RONALD SEARLE - CLONING
RONALD SEARLE - FAMOUS TRIALS THAT MIGHT HAVE BEENTHE OJ SHOW HITS GB RONALD SEARLE - THE ASTROLOGICAL YEAR: WHAT WILL IT BRING FORTH? RONALD SEARLE - CHILDREN'S COOKING CLASSES AT THE RITZ
RONALD SEARLE - EVOLUTION RONALD SEARLE - THE SORCERER AS EXECUTIONER RONALD SEARLE - WILLIE JAY
RONALD SEARLE - THE MYSTERIOUS OBJECT RONALD SEARLE - INTO THE ROUGH RONALD SEARLE - NO CHOICE BUT TO SEND YOU BOTH TO PRISON
RONALD SEARLE - FOUR PASSPORTS RONALD SEARLE - SO SORRY, NO CREDIT CARDS RONALD SEARLE - COULD NOT EXPLAIN AWAY 3000 TABLE CLOTHS
RONALD SEARLE - JUST A ROUTINE CHECK RONALD SEARLE - MR CARTWRIGHT WAS COMMITTING TO MEMORY RONALD SEARLE - REFILLED BOTH BOTTLES WITH TAP WATER
RONALD SEARLE - REGULAR GULPS RONALD SEARLE - IN THE SWEATBOX RONALD SEARLE - PAT IN THE DOCK
RONALD SEARLE - THE WINDOW SHATTERED RONALD SEARLE - THE CHESS PIECE RONALD SEARLE - SOLD TO THE GENTLEMAN ON MY LEFT
RONALD SEARLE - FIONA - ALL LEGS, ETC RONALD SEARLE - BOB - A WEED RONALD SEARLE - THE MAN FROM MARSEILLE
RONALD SEARLE - BILL TALBOT - SUSPICIOUS RONALD SEARLE - DOUG RONALD SEARLE - THE DETECTIVE SLIPPED BEHIND A MARBLE PILLAR
RONALD SEARLE - SLIPPED HIS CHIP IN THE LEFT HAND POCKET RONALD SEARLE - YOUR ACCOUNTS ARE IN APPLE PIE ORDER RONALD SEARLE - HAD BEEN ASLEEP IN HIS ROOM ...
RONALD SEARLE - KAREN CAME TO VISIT ... RONALD SEARLE - BOTH ON DUTY THE SAME NIGHT RONALD SEARLE - MUST HAVE SHAKEN OVER TWO HUNDRED HANDS
RONALD SEARLE - STANDING ALONE AT THE ENTRANCE TO THE GARDEN RONALD SEARLE - SOLD FOR FIVE THOUSAND TO MR GEORGE TSAKAING RONALD SEARLE - MALIK AVOIDS A COW
RONALD SEARLE - MALIK RONALD SEARLE - THE COMMISSIONER RONALD SEARLE - HEAVENLY SONG
RONALD SEARLE - 'COULD YOU TELL ME THE TIME PLEASE?' RONALD SEARLE - EMLYN WILLIAMS AS CHARLES DICKENS RONALD SEARLE - 'WILD THYME' ST PANDORA CROSS & ACT 1
RONALD SEARLE - TEA SHOPPE RONALD SEARLE - SUPERWOMAN RONALD SEARLE - KENNETH CLARK
RONALD SEARLE - TAX INSPECTOR RONALD SEARLE - SPECIALITY DU CHEF RONALD SEARLE - NUMEROUS HEADPIECES
RONALD SEARLE - BILLIARDS - MR LEMON HART AND MR LAMB'S  NAVY RUM RONALD SEARLE - A WINTER WARMER RONALD SEARLE - VINTAGE AND MODERN
RONALD SEARLE - 'I'M AFRAID IT'S THE WEATHER'    

RONALD SEARLE, CBE (BORN 1920)

Equally inspired by a wide range of experience and a great knowledge of the history of caricature, Ronald Searle has honed an incisive graphic skill to develop an unparalleled graphic oeuvre, an oeuvre that has made him the most popular and influential living cartoonist-illustrator.

The son of a railwayman, Ronald Searle was born in Cambridge on 3 March 1920, and was educated in the city at the Boys’ Central School. He started work as a solicitors’ clerk, then joined the hire purchase department of the Co-operative Society, studying in the evenings and later full-time at Cambridge Technical College and School of Art (1935-39).

Searle contributed cartoons regularly to the Cambridge Daily News from the age of fifteen. Enlisting in the Royal Engineers at the outbreak of the Second World War, he spent some time in Kircudbright, where he encountered evacuees from St Trinnean’s, a progressive girls’ school situated in Edinburgh. This resulted in his first cartoon for Lilliput, published in October 1941, and later developed into the anarchic St Trinian’s, known through a series of books and their cinematic spin offs. With the later schoolboy character, Nigel Molesworth of St Custard’s (devised with Geoffrey Willans in 1953), this is one of his most famous creations.

Searle first saw a copy of the Lilliput cartoon only in 1942, while incarcerated at Changi Camp, Singapore as a Japanese prisoner-of-war. Remarkably, he survived the horrific experiences of both imprisonment and slave labour and managed to produce a visual record of life in the prison camp.

On his return to England in 1945, Searle exhibited the surviving pictures at the Cambridge School of Art and, in the following year, published the collection Forty Drawings. Exhibition and volume together established his reputation as one of Britain’s most powerful draughtsmen, and led to several opportunities to record the atmosphere of post-war Europe. His familiarly audacious style was equally developed through his early contributions to Punch and crystallised in his comic collection, The Female Approach (1949), which was highly praised by Max Beerbohm. Throughout the 1950s, he produced a large variety of illustrations which together seemed to present a guide to life in Britain. In Punch alone, ‘Heroes of Our Time’, such as T S Eliot, rubbed shoulders with teddy boys and other inhabitants of ‘The Big City’.

Such was Searle’s success that his rejection of family and country in a move to Paris in 1961 came as a great surprise. However, it offered a fresh start, resulting in several solo shows, including major exhibitions at the prestigious institutions of the Berlin-Dahlem Museum and the Bibliothèque Nationale, Paris; indeed he was the first non-French living artist to exhibit at the Bibliothèque Nationale. He also reached an even wider audience with animated sequences that he produced for Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines (1965) and Monte Carlo or Bust (1969).

Despite his move to a remote village in Haute-Provence, in 1975, Searle has continued to work with energy, and publish widely. Projects have included designs for commemorative medals for the French Mint (1977-80), advertisements for American Express, Lloyds Bank and other companies, and many covers and cartoons for the New Yorker. Notable books have included Ronald Searle’s Big Fat Cat Book (1982), The Illustrated Winespeak (1983) and Slightly Foxed – But Still Desirable (1989). Searle received a CBE in the Queen’s Honours for New Year 2004.

Two exciting new books have been launched with the help of exhibitions at Chris Beetles Gallery: Jeffrey Archer’s latest collection of short stories, Cat o’ Nine Tails (2006), which contains 49 illustrations by the artist; and Robert L Forbes’ Beastly Beasts: A Mischievous Menagerie in Rhyme (2007), with over 40 images. The artwork for the latter was central to a huge New York retrospective, held in September 2007 at the Forbes Gallery, and to an exhibition at Chris Beetles Gallery in the October and November.

Additionally, in summer 2007, Chris Beetles mounted a show of fifty pictures at Nunnington Hall, a National Trust property in Yorkshire. A review by Charles Hutchinson in the York Press commented that ‘the sound of laughter emanates from the exhibition rooms at Nunnington Hall, yet Ronald Searle’s cartoons are often rimmed with darkness’.

For further information, see: Russell Davies, Ronald Searle, London: Sinclair Stevenson, 1990


Related links

The Illustrators 2007

Publications:
RONALD SEARLE. BEASTLY FEASTS
CAT O'NINE TALES AND OTHER STORIES
RONALD SEARLE. A BIOGRAPHY
SEARLE'S CATS
SLIGHTLY FOXED - BUT STILL DESIRABLE. RONALD SEARLE'S WORLD OF BOOK COLLECTING
THE ILLUSTRATED WINESPEAK. RONALD SEARLE'S WICKED WORLD OF WINE TASTING
RONALD SEARLE. TO THE KWAI AND BACK. WAR DRAWINGS 1939-1945

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