The Tree with Animals; The Story Of A Tree
- Object:
Drawing
- Place of origin:
London, England (made)
- Date:
ca. 1945 (made)
1945 (published) - Artist/Maker:
Rolf Brandt, born 1906 - died 1986 (artist)
- Materials and Techniques:
Gouache on paper, on card support
- Credit Line:
Given by the artist's children
- Museum number:
E.546:2-2005
- Gallery location:
Prints & Drawings Study Room, level F, case WD, shelf 215, box C
Although he trained as an actor, Rolf Brandt enjoyed drawing and making collages. In his native Germany he developed an interest in Dada and Surrealism and in Bauhaus artists such as Paul Klee. He moved to London from Hamburg in the early 1930s with his brother Bill (1904–83), who became famous as a photographer.
This is one of nine illustrations that Brandt made for the children’s book The Story of a Tree by Stephen McFarlane. Charting the passage of a tree from forest to sawmill to carpenter’s workshop to toyshop, the images are a charming example of illustration for children at the end of the Second World War. Brandt’s interest in Surrealism is evident in some of the illustrations, especially the cover page, where the trees take on the forms of furniture and toys.

