Friday, 7 March 2025

Betty Swanwick - part 1

Betty Swanwick c1948

Very early in her career, Betty Swanwick established herself as an illustrator and designer of great wit and invention, so complementing her friend and teacher, Edward Bawden. Later, she produced an extraordinary series of visionary watercolours and drawings in the tradition of William Blake and Samuel Palmer, which led to her election as a Draughtsman Member of the Royal Academy. She was born on 22 May 1915, the elder daughter of Harry Swanwick, who developed as a marine watercolourist while serving as a Paymaster in the Royal Naval Reserves. She was baptised at St Peter’s Church, Aldborough Hatch, near Ilford, Essex. Swanwick was educated at a local LCC elementary school, and later at the Prendergast Grammar School, Lewisham, South London. She received her first lessons in art from her father, and was encouraged by her art mistress at the Prendergast. Her father died when she was ten years old, a loss that threw her upon her own determination to develop as an artist. During her formative years and into early adulthood, Swanwick would continue to live in South London, first at Forest Hill and then at Sydenham. At the age of fifteen, she entered Goldsmiths’ College School of Art, where she was encouraged by Clive Gardiner, the Headmaster, and Edward Bawden, her tutor. Four years later, she received scholarships to both the Central School of Arts and the Royal College of Art, and attended them at the same time as Goldsmiths.

Swanwick received commissions even before such friends and contemporaries as Carel Weight and Denton Welch. As a result of seeing her work at a student exhibition at Goldsmiths in 1936, Frank Pick commissioned her to design her first posters for London Transport, and other projects soon followed. In the same year, she returned on a part-time basis, to teach Illustration at Goldsmiths, as a successor to Bawden. Highly talented – and highly respected by her students – she taught at Goldsmiths through the Second World War, and became a full-time Senior Assistant in the Illustration School in 1948. During this post-war period, she developed her range as an artist, painting watercolours and murals, providing illustrations for books and periodicals, and designing further posters.


Having begun to illustrate books from 1939, Swanwick produced her own texts, for both children and adults, from 1945. Describing her idiosyncratic social comedies for adults as ‘novelettes’, she populated them with large-headed wide-eyed figures with tiny feet. Though they hardly hinted at her later, more spiritual preoccupations, the images amply demonstrated her instinctive wit, her innate sense of design and her skilful draughtsmanship. As a whole, the publication of these books marked an important step towards the recognition of her originality, John Betjeman calling Hoodwinked (1957), ‘strange, startling, funny with a weird beauty’. In 1950, a rare solo exhibition at The Little Gallery provided a showcase for Swanwick’s anthropomorphic watercolours, which combined her love of animals and sense of fun in the most delightful way. Her mural designs, for venues such as the Festival of Britain (1951) and the Evelina Children’s Hospital (1955), were equally successful manifestations of her jaunty early style.


Soon after the retirement of Clive Gardiner from Goldsmiths in 1958, Swanwick became aware that the new Principal, Patrick Millard, was introducing changes in methodology that favoured the avant-garde. Most damaging for Swanwick was that drawing in general, and illustration in particular, was marginalised. Increasingly ostracised by those who represented the new order, she would seek solace in artistic certainties, and so carried with her a facsimile of one of Samuel Palmer’s sketchbooks. She eventually resigned as Senior Lecturer in 1970, and left her home in Greenwich for Downgate, Tidebrook, Sussex. By this time, Swanwick was working increasingly on large-scale figurative watercolours and drawings, and exhibiting them regularly at the Royal Academy Summer Exhibition. Gradually receiving some recognition, she was elected an Associate of the Royal Academy in 1972, and a Royal Academician seven years later. She was also elected a member of the Royal Society of Painters in Water-Colours in 1976.

In the poetry and intensity of the late narrative pictures, there is a level of achievement that suggests that Swanwick had overcome earlier anxieties. Yet there was something in her character that stopped her being as well known as she might have been. She preferred to spend her time working – and, as a perfectionist, completing work with difficulty – at home, and in the company of her dogs, her cats and Jobo, her African Grey parrot.

On returning to Greenwich in 1973, Swanwick taught again at Goldsmiths for one day a week and continued to do so for five years, by which time she had settled in Tunbridge Wells, Kent.

Swanwick died in hospital, in Tunbridge Wells, on her birthday, 22 May 1989. She left her money to four charities: the Celia Hammond Animal Trust, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace and the World Wildlife Fund.


Footnote: My wife (illustrator Pauline Ellison) and I live in Tunbridge Wells. We knew Betty well and enjoyed afternoon teas at her cottage in the “Village” area, accompanied by her talkative (rude) parrot. She was a lovely lady; when she gave up working at the easel she gave her three-legged “easel stool” to Pauline:

                                       


This is part 1 of a 2-parts  on the works of Betty Swanwick:


1936 To the fields
colour lithograph poster for London Transport
101.6 x 63.5 cm 

1936 By Green Line
colour lithograph poster for London Transport
101.6 x 63.5 cm 

1936 To the farms
colour lithograph poster for London Transport
101.6 x 63.5 cm.

1936 Smithfield Club Cattle Show
colour lithograph poster for London Transport



1936 Fly away in Sussex
colour lithograph poster for London Transport
101.6 x 63.5 cm

1937 Life Study
 pencil on paper 25.5 x 47.2 cm

1937 Kew Gardens
colour lithograph poster for London Transport
102 x 64 cm

1937 Kew Gardens
colour lithograph poster for London Transport
102 x 64 cm

1937 Chestnut Time Bushy Park by Underground
colour lithograph poster for London Transport

1938 London Transport for all occasions
colour lithograph poster 102 x 64 cm

1945 Cover of The Cross Purposes by Betty Swanwick
"The Garden Party"
 published by Editions Poetry, London

The Cross Purposes
The Brother and Sister.

The Cross Purposes
The Ceremony

1949 Enjoy Your London Underground
No.4 The River
colour lithograph poster for London Transport


1949 Enjoy Your London Underground
No.4 The River



1949 Enjoy Your London Underground
No.4 The River


1949 Poster for London Transport
colour lithograph 13 x 62 cm

1949 Poster for London Transport
detail

1949 Poster for London Transport
detail

1949 Poster for London Transport
colour lithograph 17 x 62 cm

1949 Poster for London Transport 
detail

1949 Poster for London Transport 
detail

1954 Wild or Savage
colour lithograph poster for London Zoo
 102 x 64 cm

Hoodwinked: Written and Illustrated by Betty Swanwick
front cover

Hoodwinked: Mr. Fox’s suicide.


Hoodwinked: Madeleine, Cora, Castor, and Gemma.


Beauty and the Burglar: written and Illustrated by Betty Swanwick


Beauty and the Burglar: Coshing Class


c1960's  The Mercat Dream
watercolour, pencil and gouache on paper
23 x 32 cm

c1967 Preparatory Sketch for "The Pool"
pencil on paper 64 x 35 cm


c1967 Preparatory Sketch for "The Pool"
(size not given)


1970 by The River: Study for The River pencil and watercolour on paper 48.3 x 50.8 cm 


1970 Original menu card for the Spread Eagle restaurant, Greenwich, London

1973 Selling England by the Pound
cover of the fifth studio album by the English progressive rock band Genesis

c1974 Preparatory sketch for The Wilderness Regained
pencil on paper 27.5 x 35.5 cm

1975 The Flight of the Doves
pencil, watercolour and gouache on paper 43.2 x 52.1 cm

1975 The Eye of the Beholder
pencil on paper 26 x 51 cm

1976 The Strange Reply
watercolour on paper 46 x 48 cm

1976 The Awakening
pencil on paper 32.5 x 56 cm
exhibited at the Royal Academy of Arts Summer Exhibition 1978

1978 Primavera and the Sleeping Gardener
pencil on wove paper
Royal Academy Collection, London

1978 Pandora
pencil & watercolour on paper 62 x 51 cm
exhibited in the Royal Academy of Arts, Summer Exhibition 1979

1979 The Monaghan Shroud
pencil on wove paper 54.8 x W 62.5 cm

1980 Romanoff Conservatory
(Conservatory on Romanoff Lodge, Tunbridge Wells)
 pencil on paper 26.5 x 27 cm

1980 One amongst us
pencil & watercolour on paper 48.3 x 58.4 cm

1980 Design for a cat scarf
pencil on paper 65.5 x 65.5 cm


Wednesday, 5 March 2025

Frans Mettes - part 4

Frans Mettes 1909-1984 was a Dutch illustrator and poster artist. Perhaps not a familiar name outside the Netherlands, Mettes was a commercial artist whose recognisable style and characteristic humour translated into advertisements of the highest quality. From political, film and public safety posters to iconic ads for well-known Dutch brands like Heineken, Droste, Hartevelt, Amstel and Boldoot, bold colours and a cartoonish flair and imagination make things spring to life in his works. As well as illustrating many advertising posters he illustrated various books and newspaper stories. Starting in January 1938 he drew a comic strip “Het Huis aan ’t Water (The House on the Water) in the Dutch newspaper De Standard (150 episodes). 

This is part 4 of a 4-part series on the works of Frans Mettes:


1960 royal interocean lines
colour lithograph poster 100.5 x 71 cm

1960 RAI 42e Tentoonstelling van Personenauto's
(RAI 42nd Exhibition of passenger cars)
colour lithograph poster 55 x 39 cm

1960 Ook in vacantietijd verkeersveiligheid
(Road safety also during holidays)
colour lithograph poster 70 x 50 cm

1960 Nuts un produit delicieux
(Nuts, a delicious product)
colour lithograph poster 85 x 118 cm

1960 Nebato ons daaglijks brood in de wereld
(Nebato, our daily bread in the world)
colour lithograph poster 59 x 42 cm

c1960 Politie 'n boeiend vak
(Police is a fascinating profession)
colour lithograph on linen 84 x 60.5 cm

1961 Hartevelt ouwe jongens
(Hartevelt old boys)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1961 Hartevelt (lemon)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1961 Droste Cacao Culinaire Capriolen
(Droste Cocoa Culinary Antics)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1961 De Rijkspolitie, vraagt mannen van de daad
(The National Police asks Men to take Action)
colour lithograph poster 51.5 x 35 cm

1961 Sir Richard Cigarettes, De filter die smaakt
(Sir Richard Cigarettes; The Filter that Tastes)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1961 nieuwe rai personenauto's - caravans
(new rai passenger cars - caravans)
colour lithograph 55 x 40 cm

1961 nieuwe tweewielers
(new rai two-wheelers)
colour lithograph 55 x 40 cm

1961 Heineken het beste van het beste
(Heineken the best of the best)
colour lithograph poster 115.5 x 82 cm

1962 apparatuur voor het moderne huis
(equipment for the modern house)
colour lithograph 58 x 40 cm

1962 de nieuwe Arendsoog  nummer 29
(the new Arendsoog Number 29)
colour lithograph poster 117.5 x 82.5 cm

1962 Chief whip op ieders lip!
(Chief Whip on everyone's lips!)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1963 Hartevelt, een kostelijke oude
(Hartevelt, a precious old one)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1963 Hartevelt Citroen, pik er eentje!
(Hartevelt Lemon, pick one up)
colour lithograph poster 116.5 x 83 cm

1964 Heineken het meest getapt!
(Heineken tapped the most!)
colour lithograph on cardboard 61 x 46 cm

1964 Hartevelt, daar zit zit U goed mee
(Hartevelt, you're fine with that)
colour lithograph poster 115,5 x 82 cm

1964 Boldoot, Koninklijk Verzorgd
(Boldoot, Royal Care)
colour lityhograph poster 116.5 x 83 cm

1966 Hartevelt de nationale jonge
(Hartevelt the national youngster)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1966 Hartevelt Citroen
(Hartevelt Lemon)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1967 Hartevelt Zie troen!
(Hartevelt  'lemon'!)
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1967 Elisabeth, 10 Basjes 1.10
colour lithograph poster 117 x 82.5 cm

1968 margriet
colour lithograph poster 113.5 x 81 cm

1971 Veiligheid een kwestie van Samenwerking
(Safety is a matter of cooperation)
colour lithograph poster 70 x 50 cm

1971 Stadsschouwburg Eindhoven fons jansen kwartetten
(City theatre Eindhoven fons jansen quartets)
colour lithograph poster 73.5 x 53 cm

1971 Hartevelt, geef 'm de ruimte
(Hartevelt, gives him space) 
colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1972 Blanche Mild Super Kings
clour lithograph poster 118 x 83 cm

1973 Concertgebouw, Stan Kenton
(Concert Hall, Stan Kenton)
 two-colour lithograph poster 116 x 83 cm

1974 seuls les chats retombent toujours sur leurs pattes
(only cats always land on their feet)
mono-colour lithograph poster 60 x 41.5 cm

1975 Hartevelt, iets goeds onder de boom
(Hartevelt, something good under the tree)
colour lithograph  57 x 40 cm

1980 Fons Jansen, zullen we handhaven
colour lithograph poster 118 x 83 cm

n.d. Harteveld sjonge jonge
colour lithograph 34.3 x 26.2 cm

n.d. Nú Beverol anti-fries
(Beverol anti-freeze)
original artwork for a poster
gouache 81 x 59 cm