| Robert Stewart Sheriffs 1906 - 1960 Best known as film caricaturist for Punch - specialising in effective 
        abstracted drawings of celebrity in ink, where the abstraction always 
        retains a likeness. Here Sheriffs takes delight in the representation 
        of his Punch colleague Ronald Searle whose St Trinians characters were 
        deployed on stage and film during this period. This comes from Punch October 
        1954. The contrasted brushwork on Searle's hair brows and beard is characteristic 
        Sheriffs - three different ways of drawing in the one image (reproduced 
        originally at 9 x 12 cms). I have scanned it much larger to emphasise 
        qualities of line and tone in Sheriffs' work. His early work as shown 
        in Salute if You Must (c1940) , demonstrates his drawing 
        skills and visual solutions. He has an uncanny ability at constructing 
        the persuasive mechanical.
 
         ENDPAPERS FOR AN ODHAMS CHILDREN ANNUAL
  CARICATURES FOR PUNCH
  ILLUSTRATIONS TO OMAR KHAYYAM
 "The brush was better than the pen for all manner of drawings, and confirmed my previous conviction that figures and faces were patterns to be studied and memorised - not patiently drawn from life. I regarded caricatures as designs, and the expressions on faces merely as changes in a basic pattern".
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