| David Low 
        1891- 1963
 
 Low worked extensively for English newspapers and publishers. Originally 
        a New Zealander he came to Britain after the First World War, and always 
        maintained a sharp outsider's view of the British political scene. He 
        worked for the Conservative newspapers but always sustained a radical 
        stance. He was a marvellous draftsman and was especially successful with 
        multi-figure compositions.
 
 
 01 detail from a double page cartoon for KEN magazine July 1938
 
 02 detail from a double page cartoon for KEN magazine May 1938
 
 03 JIX was a contraction for the baby faced politician Joyson-Hicks -
        this a masterpiece of facial nuance using the conventions of the Photobooth
        grid; from David Lowe, Ye Madde Designer , London 1935,p.15. This is
        a rich set of observations on the role and technique of the cartoonist.
 
 04 "Revolution at our Turkish bath" was originally published 
        in July 1936 in the London Evening Standard The most impressive feature 
        of Low's radicalism was his courage taking on the Powers-that-be even 
        later during a time of War - when everybody was meant to pull together. 
        His depiction of an elderly and reactionary Army officer more sympathetic 
        to Cavalry than tanks materialised as "Colonel Blimp". The figure 
        was given flesh by the film director Michael Powell in "The Life 
        and Death of Colonel Blimp" . Low's creation gave rise to a handy
        archetypal figure with which to criticise the complacency and snobbery
        of the British establishment
 
 
 05 Low combined an economy of word and concept with a phenomenal drawing 
        talent. He was capable of the broadest of broadsides at the Prime Minister 
        of the Day, and a moving spectacle, as here, of the dead coming back to 
        haunt the defendants of the Nuremburg Trials of Nazi War Criminals, in 
      a cartoon published on October 1st 1946.
 06 from 
        Ye Madde Designer, Baldwin's character reduced as his 
        central feature achieves supremacy. 
 
        
          
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