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Ronald Searle

Ronald William Fordham Searle CBE RDI (3 March 1920 – 30 December 2011[1]) was an English artist and satirical cartoonist, comics artist, sculptor, medal designer and illustrator. He is perhaps best remembered as the creator of St Trinian's School and for his collaboration with Geoffrey Willans on the Molesworth series.[2]

Ronald Searle

Searle in 2011
Born
Ronald William Fordham Searle

(1920-03-03)3 March 1920
Cambridge, England
Died30 December 2011(2011-12-30) (aged 91)[1]
Draguignan, Var, Provence, France
NationalityBritish
Known forIllustration, graphic artist, cartoons

Biography edit

 
In the Jungle – Self Portrait, Konyu, Thailand Jungle, July 1943

Searle was born in Cambridge, England, where his father was a Post Office worker who repaired telephone lines.[3] He started drawing at the age of five and left school (Central School – now Parkside School) at the age of 15. He trained at Cambridge College of Arts and Technology (now Anglia Ruskin University) for two years.[4]

In April 1939, realizing that war was inevitable, he abandoned his art studies to enlist in the Royal Engineers. In January 1942, he was in the 287th Field Company, RE in Singapore. After a month of fighting in Malaya, he was taken prisoner along with his cousin Tom Fordham Searle, when Singapore fell to the Japanese. He spent the rest of the war as prisoner, first in Changi Prison and then in the Kwai jungle, working on the Siam-Burma Death Railway. Searle contracted both beriberi and malaria during his incarceration, which included numerous beatings, and his weight dropped to less than 40 kilograms. He was liberated in late 1945 with the final defeat of the Japanese. After the war, he served as a courtroom artist at the Nuremberg trials and later the Adolf Eichmann trial (1961).[2]

He married the journalist Kaye Webb in 1947; they had twins, Kate and Johnny. In 1961, Searle moved to Paris, leaving his family; the marriage ended in divorce in 1967.[5] Later he married Monica Koenig, a painter, theatre and jewellery designer.[6] After 1975, Searle and his wife lived and worked in the mountains of Haute Provence.

Searle's wife Monica died in July 2011 and he himself died on 30 December 2011, aged 91.

Early work as war artist during captivity edit

 
In the Jungle - Working on a Cutting. Rock Clearing after Blasting, 1943

Although Searle published the first St Trinian's cartoon in the magazine Lilliput in 1941, his professional career really begins with his documentation of the brutal camp conditions of his period as a prisoner-of-war of the Japanese in World War II in a series of drawings that he hid under the mattresses of prisoners dying of cholera. Searle recalled, "I desperately wanted to put down what was happening, because I thought if by any chance there was a record, even if I died, someone might find it and know what went on." But Searle survived, along with approximately 300 of his drawings. Liberated late in 1945, Searle returned to England, where he published several of the drawings in fellow prisoner Russell Braddon's The Naked Island. Another of Searle's fellow prisoners later recounted, "If you can imagine something that weighs six stone or so, is on the point of death and has no qualities of the human condition that aren't revolting, calmly lying there with a pencil and a scrap of paper, drawing, you have some idea of the difference of temperament that this man had from the ordinary human being."[3]

Most of these drawings appear in his 1986 book, Ronald Searle: To the Kwai and Back, War Drawings 1939–1945.[7] In the book, Searle also wrote of his experiences as a prisoner, including the day he woke up to find a dead friend on either side of him, and a live snake underneath his head:

You can’t have that sort of experience without it directing the rest of your life. I think that’s why I never really left my prison cell, because it gave me my measuring stick for the rest of my life... Basically all the people we loved and knew and grew up with simply became fertiliser for the nearest bamboo.

At least one of his drawings is on display at the Changi Museum and Chapel, Singapore, but the majority of his originals are in the permanent collection of the Imperial War Museum, London, along with the works of other POW artists. The best known of these are John Mennie, Jack Bridger Chalker, Philip Meninsky and Ashley George Old.

Magazines, books, and films edit

 
Modern Classics reissue of Ronald Searle's St Trinian's drawings

Searle produced an extraordinary volume of work during the 1950s, including drawings for Life, Holiday and Punch.[8] His cartoons appeared in The New Yorker, the Sunday Express and the News Chronicle. He compiled more St Trinian's books, which were based on his sister's school and other girls' schools in Cambridge. He collaborated with Geoffrey Willans on the Molesworth books (Down With Skool!, 1953, and How to be Topp, 1954), and with Alex Atkinson on travel books. In addition to advertisements and posters, Searle drew the title backgrounds of the Sidney Gilliat and Frank Launder film The Happiest Days of Your Life.[3]

After moving to Paris in 1961, he worked more on reportage for Life and Holiday and less on cartoons. He also continued to work in a broad range of media and created books (including his well-known cat books), animated films and sculpture for commemorative medals, both for the French Mint and the British Art Medal Society.[9][10] Searle did a considerable amount of designing for the cinema, and in 1965, he completed the opening, intermission and closing credits for the comedy film Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines as well as the 1969 film Monte Carlo or Bust! In 1975, the full-length cartoon Dick Deadeye, or Duty Done was released. It is based on the character and songs from H.M.S. Pinafore.[11]

Medallist edit

 
Medal by Searle titled Searle at 70. Struck by Thomas Fattorini Ltd

Searle designed the 1992 delegates medal for the FIDEM XXIII Congress London. It depicted a half-length bust of the renaissance medallist Pisanello and was struck by the Royal Mint. Other notable medals were "Searle at Seventy" (1990)[12] and "Kwai 50th Anniversary" (1991), both struck by Thomas Fattorini Ltd, and "Charles Dickens" (1983) struck by the Birmingham Mint.

Archives edit

In 2010, he gave about 2,200 of his works as permanent loans to Wilhelm Busch Museum, Hanover (Germany), now renamed Deutsches Museum für Karikatur und Zeichenkunst. Previously the summer palace of George I of Hanover, this museum also holds Searle's archives.

Awards edit

Searle received much recognition for his work, especially in America, including the National Cartoonists Society's Advertising and Illustration Award in 1959 and 1965, the Reuben Award in 1960, their Illustration Award in 1980 and their Advertising Award in 1986 and 1987. Searle was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2004.[3] In 2007, he was decorated with one of France's highest awards, the Chevalier de la Légion d'honneur, and in 2009, he received the German Lower Saxony Order of Merit.

Influence edit

His work has had a great deal of influence, particularly on American cartoonists, including Pat Oliphant,[13] Matt Groening,[14] Hilary Knight,[15] and the animators of Disney's 101 Dalmatians.[16]

He was an early influence on John Lennon's drawing style which featured in the books In His Own Write and A Spaniard in the Works.[17] Anglia Ruskin University has named the Ronald Searle Award for Creativity in the Arts in his honour.[4]

Searle was an admiring friend of, and admired by, the satirical humorist S. J. Perelman. Searle was also an important influence on the young Gerald Scarfe.

Bibliography edit

St Trinian's edit

  • Hurrah For St Trinians, 1948
  • The Female Approach: The Belles of St. Trinian's and Other Cartoons, 1950
  • Back To The Slaughterhouse, and Other Ugly Moments, 1951
  • The Terror of St Trinian's, or Angela's Prince Charming, 1952 (with Timothy Shy (D. B. Wyndham-Lewis))
  • Souls in Torment, 1953 (preface by Cecil Day-Lewis)
  • The St Trinian's Story, 1959 (with Kaye Webb)
  • St Trinian's: The Cartoons, 2007
  • St. Trinian's: The Entire Appalling Business, 2008

Molesworth edit

  • Down With Skool!: A Guide to School Life for Tiny Pupils and Their Parents, 1953 (with Geoffrey Willans)
  • How to be Topp: A Guide to Sukcess for Tiny Pupils, Including All There is to Kno About Space, 1954 (with Geoffrey Willans)
  • Whizz for Atomms: A Guide to Survival in the 20th Century for Fellow Pupils, their Doting Maters, Pompous Paters and Any Others who are Interested, 1956 (with Geoffrey Willans) Published in the U.S. as Molesworth's Guide to the Atommic Age
  • Back in the Jug Agane, 1959 (with Geoffrey Willans)
  • The Compleet Molesworth, 1958 (collection) Molesworth (1999 Penguin reprint)

Other works edit

  • Forty Drawings (1946)
  • White Coolie, 1947 (with Ronald Hastain)
  • This England 1946–1949, 1949 (edited by Audrey Hilton)
  • The Stolen Journey, 1950 (with Oliver Philpot)
  • An Irishman's Diary, 1950 (with Patrick Campbell)
  • A Short Trot with a Cultured Mind,

1950 (with Patrick Campbell)

  • Dear Life, 1950 (with H. E. Bates)
  • Paris Sketchbook, 1950 (with Kaye Webb) (repr. 1958)
  • A Sleep of Prisoners, 1951 (with Christopher Fry)
  • Life in Thin Slices, 1951 (with Patrick Campbell)
  • The Naked Island, 1952 (with Russell Braddon)
  • It Must be True, 1952 (with Denys Parsons)
  • London—So Help Me!, 1952 (with Winifred Ellis)
  • The Diverting History of John Gilpin, 1953 (text by William Cowper)
  • Looking at London and People Worth Meeting, 1953 (with Kaye Webb)
  • Six Animal Plays, 1952 (text by Frank Carpenter)
  • The Dark is Light Enough, 1954 (with Christopher Fry)
  • Patrick Campbells Omnibus, 1954 (with Patrick Campbell)
  • The Journal of Edwin Carp, 1954 (edited by Richard Haydn)
  • Modern Types, 1955 (with Geoffrey Gorer)
  • The Rake's Progress, 1955
  • Merry England, Etc, 1956
  • Anglo-Saxon Attitudes, 1956 (with Angus Wilson)
  • The Big City or the New Mayhew , 1958 (with Alex Atkinson)
  • The Dog's Ear Book, 1958 (with Geoffrey Willans)
  • USA for Beginners, 1959 (with Alex Atkinson)
  • Anger of Achilles: Homer's Iliad, 1959 (translation by Robert Graves)
  • By Rocking Horse Across Russia, 1960 (with Alex Atkinson)
  • Penguin Ronald Searle, 1960
  • Refugees 1960: A Report in Words and Pictures, 1960 (with Kaye Webb)
  • The Biting Eye of Andre Francois (1960)
  • Which Way Did He Go?, 1961
  • A Christmas Carol, 1961 (with Charles Dickens)
  • The 13 Clocks and the Wonderful O, 1962 (with James Thurber)
  • Searle in the Sixties, 1964
  • From Frozen North to Filthy Lucre, 1964
  • Haven't We Met Before Somewhere?, 1966
  • Searle's Cats, 1967
  • The Square Egg, 1968
  • Take One Toad, 1968
  • This Business of Bomfog, 1969 (with Madelaine Duke)
  • Monte Carlo Or Bust, 1969 (with E. W. Hildick)
  • Hello, where did all the people go?, 1969
  • The Second Coming of Toulouse-Lautrec, 1969
  • Secret Sketchbook, 1969
  • The Great Fur Opera: Annals of the Hudson's Bay Company 1670–1970, 1970 (with Kildare Dobbs)[18]
  • Scrooge, 1970 (with Elaine Donaldson)
  • Mr. Lock of St. James's Street, 1971 (with Frank Whitbourn)
  • The Addict, 1971
  • More Cats, 1975
  • Dick Dead Eye, 1975 (after Gilbert and Sullivan)
  • Paris! Paris!, 1977 (with Irwin Shaw)
  • Zodiac, 1977
  • Ronald Searle, 1978
  • The King of Beasts & Other Creatures, 1980
  • The Situation is Hopeless, 1980
  • Winning the Restaurant Game, 1980 (with Jay Jacobs)
  • Too Many Songs by Tom Lehrer With Not Enough Drawings by Ronald Searle, 1981
  • Ronald Searle's Big Fat Cat Book, 1982
  • The Illustrated Winespeak, 1983
  • Ronald Searle in Perspective, 1983
  • Ronald Searle's Golden Oldies 1941–1961, 1985
  • Something in the Cellar, 1986
  • To the Kwai and Back: War Drawings 1939–1945 (1986)
  • Ronald Searle's Non-Sexist Dictionary, 1988
  • Ah Yes, I Remember It Well...: Paris 1961–1975, 1988
  • Slightly Foxed But Still Desirable: Ronald Searle's Wicked World of Book Collecting, 1989
  • Marquis De Sade Meets Goody Two-Shoes, 1994
  • The Tales of Grandpa Cat, 1994 (with Lee Wardlaw)
  • The Hatless Man, 1995 (with Sarah Kortum)
  • A French Affair : The Paris Beat, 1965–1998, 1999 (with Mary Blume)
  • Wicked Etiquette, 2000 (with Sarah Kortum)
  • Ronald Searle in Le Monde, 2001
  • Railway of Hell: A Japanese POW's Account of War, Capture and Forced Labour, 2002 (with Reginald Burton)
  • Searle's Cats, 2005 (New and Expanded Edition, all illustrations are new)
  • The Scrapbook Drawings", 2005
  • Cat O' Nine Tales: And Other Stories, 2006 (with Jeffrey Archer)
  • Beastly Feasts: A Mischievous Menagerie in Rhyme, 2007 (with Robert Forbes)
  • More Scraps & Watteau Revisited, 2008
  • Let's Have a Bite!: A Banquet of Beastly Rhymes, 2010 (with Robert Forbes)
  • What! Already?: Searle at 90, 2010
  • Les Très Riches Heures de Mrs Mole, 2011
  • What Am I Still Doing Here?, 2011 (with Roger Lewis)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b "UK artist, St Trinian's creator Searle dies aged 91". Reuters. 3 January 2012.
  2. ^ a b "Ronald Searle". Lambiek Comiclopedia.
  3. ^ a b c d "Ronald Searle". The Daily Telegraph. London. 3 January 2012.
  4. ^ a b "Anglia Ruskin exhibition pays tribute to St Trinians originator Ronald Searle". Retrieved 6 September 2018.
  5. ^ Eccleshare, Julia (17 January 1996). "OBITUARY: Kaye Webb". The Independent. Retrieved 29 January 2017. married ... thirdly 1946 Ronald Searle (one son, one daughter; marriage dissolved 1967)
  6. ^ Monica Searle: The Art of the Necklace 15 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Artslant – New York – Retrieved 5 January 2012
  7. ^ Bill Maudlin (10 August 1986). "Sketches From Life and Death – review of To the Kwai – And Back". The New York Times.
  8. ^ John Walsh (4 January 2012). "Master of St Trinian's: The death of Ronald Searle". The Independent.
  9. ^ "Antonio Pisanello – 23rd FIDEM Congress Medal". Sculpture. Victoria and Albert Museum. 10 February 1992. Retrieved 1 September 2007.
  10. ^ Medals 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine created for the British Art Medal Society
  11. ^ "Dick Deadeye, or Duty Done (1975)" 26 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine, Time Out Film Guide. Retrieved 7 May 2009
  12. ^ "Medal : "Searle at Seventy"(1990) for BAMS (The British Art Medal Society)". British Art Medal Society. BAMS. Retrieved 9 June 2020.
  13. ^ Oliphant, Pat; Katz, Harry L.; Day, Sara (1998). Oliphant's Anthem. Andrews McMeel. p. 26. ISBN 9780836258981. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  14. ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the : "My Wasted Life – Matt Groening documentary". Retrieved 14 February 2012 – via YouTube.
  15. ^ Kissel, Howard (23 May 1999). "Plaza Sweetie Eloise, New York's Most Lovable Literary Brat, Makes A Comeback". Daily News. New York.
  16. ^ Amidi, Amid (17 August 2006). Cartoon modern: style and design in fifties animation. Chronicle Books. ISBN 9780811847315. Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  17. ^ "John Lennon Interview – Beatles Interview Database". Retrieved 14 February 2012.
  18. ^ The Great Fur Opera illustrated for the Hudson's Bay Company

Further reading edit

  • "Ronald Searle: a life in pictures". Steve Bell, The Guardian. 9 March 2010.
  • "Aged 90, Ronald Searle recalls the bad girls of St Trinian's". Valerie Grove. Times Online. 20 February 2010.
  • "St Trinian's creator Searle reaches 90". Nicholas Glass. Channel 4 News. 2 March 2010.
  • Interview on BBC Radio 4, Desert Island Discs, 10 July 2005
  • 1945 illustration – OECD Observer, No 246-247, Dec 2004 – Jan 2005 – (Retrieved 4 January 2012)
  • Scion of a Noble Line: Interview with Ronald Searle, The Guardian. December 2000.
  • Article by Harry Mount, The Spectator, 10 March 2010
  • Der freigezeichnete Gefangene, Wilhelm Platthaus, Frankfurter Allgemeine, 27 February 2010
  • Ronald Searle in Perspective (1984)
  • Ronald Searle, intro. by Henning Bock & essay by Paul Dehaye (1978)

External links edit

  • Full bibliography
  • Ronald Searle & the St. Trinian's Cartoons
  • at the Wayback Machine (archived 28 October 2007)
  • Ronald Searle in Le Monde
  • Comiclopedia: Ronald Searle
  • Ronald Searle at IMDb
  • Cover of the 1947 Christmas edition of the Radio Times, by Searle

ronald, searle, canadian, politician, searle, ronald, william, fordham, searle, march, 1920, december, 2011, english, artist, satirical, cartoonist, comics, artist, sculptor, medal, designer, illustrator, perhaps, best, remembered, creator, trinian, school, co. For the Canadian politician see Ron Searle Ronald William Fordham Searle CBE RDI 3 March 1920 30 December 2011 1 was an English artist and satirical cartoonist comics artist sculptor medal designer and illustrator He is perhaps best remembered as the creator of St Trinian s School and for his collaboration with Geoffrey Willans on the Molesworth series 2 Ronald SearleCBE RDISearle in 2011BornRonald William Fordham Searle 1920 03 03 3 March 1920Cambridge EnglandDied30 December 2011 2011 12 30 aged 91 1 Draguignan Var Provence FranceNationalityBritishKnown forIllustration graphic artist cartoons Contents 1 Biography 2 Early work as war artist during captivity 3 Magazines books and films 4 Medallist 5 Archives 6 Awards 7 Influence 8 Bibliography 8 1 St Trinian s 8 2 Molesworth 8 3 Other works 9 See also 10 References 11 Further reading 12 External linksBiography edit nbsp In the Jungle Self Portrait Konyu Thailand Jungle July 1943 Searle was born in Cambridge England where his father was a Post Office worker who repaired telephone lines 3 He started drawing at the age of five and left school Central School now Parkside School at the age of 15 He trained at Cambridge College of Arts and Technology now Anglia Ruskin University for two years 4 In April 1939 realizing that war was inevitable he abandoned his art studies to enlist in the Royal Engineers In January 1942 he was in the 287th Field Company RE in Singapore After a month of fighting in Malaya he was taken prisoner along with his cousin Tom Fordham Searle when Singapore fell to the Japanese He spent the rest of the war as prisoner first in Changi Prison and then in the Kwai jungle working on the Siam Burma Death Railway Searle contracted both beriberi and malaria during his incarceration which included numerous beatings and his weight dropped to less than 40 kilograms He was liberated in late 1945 with the final defeat of the Japanese After the war he served as a courtroom artist at the Nuremberg trials and later the Adolf Eichmann trial 1961 2 He married the journalist Kaye Webb in 1947 they had twins Kate and Johnny In 1961 Searle moved to Paris leaving his family the marriage ended in divorce in 1967 5 Later he married Monica Koenig a painter theatre and jewellery designer 6 After 1975 Searle and his wife lived and worked in the mountains of Haute Provence Searle s wife Monica died in July 2011 and he himself died on 30 December 2011 aged 91 Early work as war artist during captivity edit nbsp In the Jungle Working on a Cutting Rock Clearing after Blasting 1943 Although Searle published the first St Trinian s cartoon in the magazine Lilliput in 1941 his professional career really begins with his documentation of the brutal camp conditions of his period as a prisoner of war of the Japanese in World War II in a series of drawings that he hid under the mattresses of prisoners dying of cholera Searle recalled I desperately wanted to put down what was happening because I thought if by any chance there was a record even if I died someone might find it and know what went on But Searle survived along with approximately 300 of his drawings Liberated late in 1945 Searle returned to England where he published several of the drawings in fellow prisoner Russell Braddon s The Naked Island Another of Searle s fellow prisoners later recounted If you can imagine something that weighs six stone or so is on the point of death and has no qualities of the human condition that aren t revolting calmly lying there with a pencil and a scrap of paper drawing you have some idea of the difference of temperament that this man had from the ordinary human being 3 Most of these drawings appear in his 1986 book Ronald Searle To the Kwai and Back War Drawings 1939 1945 7 In the book Searle also wrote of his experiences as a prisoner including the day he woke up to find a dead friend on either side of him and a live snake underneath his head You can t have that sort of experience without it directing the rest of your life I think that s why I never really left my prison cell because it gave me my measuring stick for the rest of my life Basically all the people we loved and knew and grew up with simply became fertiliser for the nearest bamboo At least one of his drawings is on display at the Changi Museum and Chapel Singapore but the majority of his originals are in the permanent collection of the Imperial War Museum London along with the works of other POW artists The best known of these are John Mennie Jack Bridger Chalker Philip Meninsky and Ashley George Old Magazines books and films edit nbsp Modern Classics reissue of Ronald Searle s St Trinian s drawings Searle produced an extraordinary volume of work during the 1950s including drawings for Life Holiday and Punch 8 His cartoons appeared in The New Yorker the Sunday Express and the News Chronicle He compiled more St Trinian s books which were based on his sister s school and other girls schools in Cambridge He collaborated with Geoffrey Willans on the Molesworth books Down With Skool 1953 and How to be Topp 1954 and with Alex Atkinson on travel books In addition to advertisements and posters Searle drew the title backgrounds of the Sidney Gilliat and Frank Launder film The Happiest Days of Your Life 3 After moving to Paris in 1961 he worked more on reportage for Life and Holiday and less on cartoons He also continued to work in a broad range of media and created books including his well known cat books animated films and sculpture for commemorative medals both for the French Mint and the British Art Medal Society 9 10 Searle did a considerable amount of designing for the cinema and in 1965 he completed the opening intermission and closing credits for the comedy film Those Magnificent Men in their Flying Machines as well as the 1969 film Monte Carlo or Bust In 1975 the full length cartoon Dick Deadeye or Duty Done was released It is based on the character and songs from H M S Pinafore 11 Medallist edit nbsp Medal by Searle titled Searle at 70 Struck by Thomas Fattorini Ltd Searle designed the 1992 delegates medal for the FIDEM XXIII Congress London It depicted a half length bust of the renaissance medallist Pisanello and was struck by the Royal Mint Other notable medals were Searle at Seventy 1990 12 and Kwai 50th Anniversary 1991 both struck by Thomas Fattorini Ltd and Charles Dickens 1983 struck by the Birmingham Mint Archives editIn 2010 he gave about 2 200 of his works as permanent loans to Wilhelm Busch Museum Hanover Germany now renamed Deutsches Museum fur Karikatur und Zeichenkunst Previously the summer palace of George I of Hanover this museum also holds Searle s archives Awards editSearle received much recognition for his work especially in America including the National Cartoonists Society s Advertising and Illustration Award in 1959 and 1965 the Reuben Award in 1960 their Illustration Award in 1980 and their Advertising Award in 1986 and 1987 Searle was appointed Commander of the Order of the British Empire in 2004 3 In 2007 he was decorated with one of France s highest awards the Chevalier de la Legion d honneur and in 2009 he received the German Lower Saxony Order of Merit Influence editHis work has had a great deal of influence particularly on American cartoonists including Pat Oliphant 13 Matt Groening 14 Hilary Knight 15 and the animators of Disney s 101 Dalmatians 16 He was an early influence on John Lennon s drawing style which featured in the books In His Own Write and A Spaniard in the Works 17 Anglia Ruskin University has named the Ronald Searle Award for Creativity in the Arts in his honour 4 Searle was an admiring friend of and admired by the satirical humorist S J Perelman Searle was also an important influence on the young Gerald Scarfe Bibliography editSt Trinian s edit Hurrah For St Trinians 1948 The Female Approach The Belles of St Trinian s and Other Cartoons 1950 Back To The Slaughterhouse and Other Ugly Moments 1951 The Terror of St Trinian s or Angela s Prince Charming 1952 with Timothy Shy D B Wyndham Lewis Souls in Torment 1953 preface by Cecil Day Lewis The St Trinian s Story 1959 with Kaye Webb St Trinian s The Cartoons 2007 St Trinian s The Entire Appalling Business 2008 Molesworth edit Down With Skool A Guide to School Life for Tiny Pupils and Their Parents 1953 with Geoffrey Willans How to be Topp A Guide to Sukcess for Tiny Pupils Including All There is to Kno About Space 1954 with Geoffrey Willans Whizz for Atomms A Guide to Survival in the 20th Century for Fellow Pupils their Doting Maters Pompous Paters and Any Others who are Interested 1956 with Geoffrey Willans Published in the U S as Molesworth s Guide to the Atommic Age Back in the Jug Agane 1959 with Geoffrey Willans The Compleet Molesworth 1958 collection Molesworth 1999 Penguin reprint Other works edit Forty Drawings 1946 White Coolie 1947 with Ronald Hastain This England 1946 1949 1949 edited by Audrey Hilton The Stolen Journey 1950 with Oliver Philpot An Irishman s Diary 1950 with Patrick Campbell A Short Trot with a Cultured Mind 1950 with Patrick Campbell Dear Life 1950 with H E Bates Paris Sketchbook 1950 with Kaye Webb repr 1958 A Sleep of Prisoners 1951 with Christopher Fry Life in Thin Slices 1951 with Patrick Campbell The Naked Island 1952 with Russell Braddon It Must be True 1952 with Denys Parsons London So Help Me 1952 with Winifred Ellis The Diverting History of John Gilpin 1953 text by William Cowper Looking at London and People Worth Meeting 1953 with Kaye Webb Six Animal Plays 1952 text by Frank Carpenter The Dark is Light Enough 1954 with Christopher Fry Patrick Campbells Omnibus 1954 with Patrick Campbell The Journal of Edwin Carp 1954 edited by Richard Haydn Modern Types 1955 with Geoffrey Gorer The Rake s Progress 1955 Merry England Etc 1956 Anglo Saxon Attitudes 1956 with Angus Wilson The Big City or the New Mayhew 1958 with Alex Atkinson The Dog s Ear Book 1958 with Geoffrey Willans USA for Beginners 1959 with Alex Atkinson Anger of Achilles Homer s Iliad 1959 translation by Robert Graves By Rocking Horse Across Russia 1960 with Alex Atkinson Penguin Ronald Searle 1960 Refugees 1960 A Report in Words and Pictures 1960 with Kaye Webb The Biting Eye of Andre Francois 1960 Which Way Did He Go 1961 A Christmas Carol 1961 with Charles Dickens The 13 Clocks and the Wonderful O 1962 with James Thurber Searle in the Sixties 1964 From Frozen North to Filthy Lucre 1964 Haven t We Met Before Somewhere 1966 Searle s Cats 1967 The Square Egg 1968 Take One Toad 1968 This Business of Bomfog 1969 with Madelaine Duke Monte Carlo Or Bust 1969 with E W Hildick Hello where did all the people go 1969 The Second Coming of Toulouse Lautrec 1969 Secret Sketchbook 1969 The Great Fur Opera Annals of the Hudson s Bay Company 1670 1970 1970 with Kildare Dobbs 18 Scrooge 1970 with Elaine Donaldson Mr Lock of St James s Street 1971 with Frank Whitbourn The Addict 1971 More Cats 1975 Dick Dead Eye 1975 after Gilbert and Sullivan Paris Paris 1977 with Irwin Shaw Zodiac 1977 Ronald Searle 1978 The King of Beasts amp Other Creatures 1980 The Situation is Hopeless 1980 Winning the Restaurant Game 1980 with Jay Jacobs Too Many Songs by Tom Lehrer With Not Enough Drawings by Ronald Searle 1981 Ronald Searle s Big Fat Cat Book 1982 The Illustrated Winespeak 1983 Ronald Searle in Perspective 1983 Ronald Searle s Golden Oldies 1941 1961 1985 Something in the Cellar 1986 To the Kwai and Back War Drawings 1939 1945 1986 Ronald Searle s Non Sexist Dictionary 1988 Ah Yes I Remember It Well Paris 1961 1975 1988 Slightly Foxed But Still Desirable Ronald Searle s Wicked World of Book Collecting 1989 Marquis De Sade Meets Goody Two Shoes 1994 The Tales of Grandpa Cat 1994 with Lee Wardlaw The Hatless Man 1995 with Sarah Kortum A French Affair The Paris Beat 1965 1998 1999 with Mary Blume Wicked Etiquette 2000 with Sarah Kortum Ronald Searle in Le Monde 2001 Railway of Hell A Japanese POW s Account of War Capture and Forced Labour 2002 with Reginald Burton Searle s Cats 2005 New and Expanded Edition all illustrations are new The Scrapbook Drawings 2005 Cat O Nine Tales And Other Stories 2006 with Jeffrey Archer Beastly Feasts A Mischievous Menagerie in Rhyme 2007 with Robert Forbes More Scraps amp Watteau Revisited 2008 Let s Have a Bite A Banquet of Beastly Rhymes 2010 with Robert Forbes What Already Searle at 90 2010 Les Tres Riches Heures de Mrs Mole 2011 What Am I Still Doing Here 2011 with Roger Lewis See also editMusee Tomi Ungerer Centre international de l illustration War artistReferences edit a b UK artist St Trinian s creator Searle dies aged 91 Reuters 3 January 2012 a b Ronald Searle Lambiek Comiclopedia a b c d Ronald Searle The Daily Telegraph London 3 January 2012 a b Anglia Ruskin exhibition pays tribute to St Trinians originator Ronald Searle Retrieved 6 September 2018 Eccleshare Julia 17 January 1996 OBITUARY Kaye Webb The Independent Retrieved 29 January 2017 married thirdly 1946 Ronald Searle one son one daughter marriage dissolved 1967 Monica Searle The Art of the Necklace Archived 15 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Artslant New York Retrieved 5 January 2012 Bill Maudlin 10 August 1986 Sketches From Life and Death review of To the Kwai And Back The New York Times John Walsh 4 January 2012 Master of St Trinian s The death of Ronald Searle The Independent Antonio Pisanello 23rd FIDEM Congress Medal Sculpture Victoria and Albert Museum 10 February 1992 Retrieved 1 September 2007 Medals Archived 22 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine created for the British Art Medal Society Dick Deadeye or Duty Done 1975 Archived 26 August 2009 at the Wayback Machine Time Out Film Guide Retrieved 7 May 2009 Medal Searle at Seventy 1990 for BAMS The British Art Medal Society British Art Medal Society BAMS Retrieved 9 June 2020 Oliphant Pat Katz Harry L Day Sara 1998 Oliphant s Anthem Andrews McMeel p 26 ISBN 9780836258981 Retrieved 14 February 2012 Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine My Wasted Life Matt Groening documentary Retrieved 14 February 2012 via YouTube Kissel Howard 23 May 1999 Plaza Sweetie Eloise New York s Most Lovable Literary Brat Makes A Comeback Daily News New York Amidi Amid 17 August 2006 Cartoon modern style and design in fifties animation Chronicle Books ISBN 9780811847315 Retrieved 14 February 2012 John Lennon Interview Beatles Interview Database Retrieved 14 February 2012 The Great Fur Opera illustrated for the Hudson s Bay CompanyFurther reading edit Ronald Searle a life in pictures Steve Bell The Guardian 9 March 2010 Aged 90 Ronald Searle recalls the bad girls of St Trinian s Valerie Grove Times Online 20 February 2010 St Trinian s creator Searle reaches 90 Nicholas Glass Channel 4 News 2 March 2010 Interview on BBC Radio 4 Desert Island Discs 10 July 2005 1945 illustration OECD Observer No 246 247 Dec 2004 Jan 2005 Retrieved 4 January 2012 Scion of a Noble Line Interview with Ronald Searle The Guardian December 2000 Article by Harry Mount The Spectator 10 March 2010 Der freigezeichnete Gefangene Wilhelm Platthaus Frankfurter Allgemeine 27 February 2010 Ronald Searle in Perspective 1984 Ronald Searle intro by Henning Bock amp essay by Paul Dehaye 1978 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ronald Searle Full bibliography Ronald Searle amp the St Trinian s Cartoons Biography selected bibliography at the Wayback Machine archived 28 October 2007 Ronald Searle in Le Monde Comiclopedia Ronald Searle Ronald Searle at IMDb Cover of the 1947 Christmas edition of the Radio Times by Searle Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ronald Searle amp oldid 1215882793, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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