It''s All a Bit Heath Robinson: Re-inventing the First World War
English
By (author): Gosling In Association With Mary Evans Picture Library Lucinda Gosling Lucinda Gosling in association with Mary Evans Picture Library Mary Evans Picture Library
William Heath Robinson remains one of Britains best-loved illustrators and has embedded himself into English vernacular, inspiring the phrase its all a bit Heath Robinson to describe any precarious or unnecessarily complex contraption. Born in London, he originally had ambitions to be a landscape painter, but would establish his artistic reputation as a book illustrator during the genres so-called golden age. It was his association with weekly illustrated magazine The Sketch that was to launch and cement his legacy as a humorous artist. Combining a distinctive draughtsmanship with a curious and ingenious mind, the advent of the First World War inspired Heath Robinson to dream up a series of increasingly outlandish and bizarre military inventions with which the opposing armies would try to outwit each other. From the kaisers campaigning car or a suggestion for an armoured bayonet curler, to post-war unbullying of beef, his cartoons are a fantastically absurd take on wartime technology and home-front life. Sadly, his inventions were rejected by a (fictitious) Inventions Board, but the charm and eccentricity of his ideas was loved by the public and he remains to this day one of the finest exponents of humorous British art.
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