George Morrow (illustrator)
George Morrow | |
---|---|
Self portrait (1920) | |
Born |
5 September 1869 Belfast, Ireland |
Died |
18 January 1955 Thaxted, Essex, England |
Nationality | Irish[1] |
Known for | Cartooning, illustration |
George Morrow[2] (5 September 1869, in Belfast – 18 January 1955, in Thaxted, Essex) was a cartoonist and book illustrator. He was the son of a painter and decorator from Clifton Street in west Belfast. Of his seven brothers, four, Albert (1863–1927), Jack (1872–1926), Edwin (1877–1952) and Norman (1879–1917), were also illustrators and cartoonists.
Educated at the Model School and the Government School of Art, he was apprenticed as a signwriter. He contributed to an exhibition by the Belfast Ramblers' Sketching Club in 1888, and later studied in Paris. In the mid to late 1890s he lived in Chelsea, London, where he made the acquaintance of Mark Twain. In 1896 he contributed illustrations to Pick-Me-Up and Mary Russell Mitford's County Stories.
He contributed to Ulad, a magazine associated with the Ulster Literary Theatre, in 1905. In 1906 he sat on the committee of the first Oireachtas Art Exhibition with Jack Butler Yeats and Sarah Purser, contributed cartoons to The Shanachie and Bulmer Hobson's separatist magazine The Republic, and began his long association with Punch. Over the years he contributed 2,704 cartoons, including 22 full-page political cartoons. He joined the staff of the magazine in 1924, and was art editor from 1932 to 1937. For many years, Morrow produced "Royal Academy Depressions", a series of comic parodies of Royal Academy pictures. Other publications he contributed to included the Bystander, The Pall Mall Magazine, Sphere, Strand Magazine, Tatler and Windsor Magazine.
Several collections of his cartoons were published. An Alphabet of the War (1915) reprinted cartoons from Punch Almanack. George Morrow: His Book (1920), More Morrow (1921) and Some More (1928) followed. He also illustrated more than 70 books by other authors for adults and children, and created the satirical pictorial novel What a Life! with E. V. Lucas.[3]
He lived most of his adult life in England, although he spent many summers painting watercolours in Ireland, particularly in County Donegal. Married with no children, he died at his home in Thaxted, Essex, about a month after his last cartoon appeared in Punch.
He also had his illustrations published inside a children's history book "The Foundations of History" - A picture book of the history of our land. Published by Thomas Nelson and Sons
Partial bibliography
- Change for a Halfpenny (1905) (online version)
- What a Life! (1911, with E. V. Lucas)
- The House of the Ogress (1921), by W. E. Cule
- Elnovia (1925)
- Cinderella's Garden (1927)
- Chuckles (1927)
- The Marvellous Land of Snergs (1927)
- Simple People (1928), by Archibald Marshall
- Here Be Dragons (1930)
- Light Articles Only (1939), by A. P. Herbert
- The Birdikin Family (1932), by Archibald Marshall
References
- ↑ George Morrow, George Morrow: His Book, Methuen & Co. Ltd, London, 1920.
- ↑ Theo Snoddy, Dictionary of Irish Artists: 20th Century, Merlin Publishing, 2002
- ↑ Lucas, E V; Morrow, George (1975). What a Life!. Dover Publications. pp. x. ISBN 0-486-23133-X.
External links
- Morrow cartoons at punchcartoons.com (store).
- Simkin, John. "Spartacus: George Morrow". Retrieved 2007-07-22.
- Morrow's cartoons from Punch at HeidICON