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Illustration to Wee Benjy Brown
Drawing
1916 (made), 1918 (published)
1916 (made), 1918 (published)
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Not currently on display at the V&A
Artist/Maker | |
Place Of Origin |
Alfred Ernest Walter George Aris (1882- 1963) was a highly prolific commercial illustrator in the first half of the 20th century. He studied at the Bradford School of Art and, later, at the Royal College of Art in London. He began his career as a portrait artist and art teacher, working in watercolour and charcoal and wash, and exhibited his work at the Royal Academy, Royal Society of British Artists and the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours. By 1909, Aris was illustrating for magazines such as The Graphic and writing and illustrating children’s books. He wrote and illustrated over 170 books (the majority published by Humphrey Milford and Hodder and Stoughton) and contributed illustrations to a further 250 titles. His illustrations were also used for advertisements, cigarette cards, games, jigsaw puzzles and seaside postcards. In 1934 Cadbury’s commissioned Aris to design the Cococubs, a collection of animal characters to be given away free with their children’s cocoa. It was hailed as one of the greatest advertising schemes of the time, with an estimated 300,000 children collecting them.
This charming illustration appears in chapter one of Wee Benjy Brown, published by Humphrey Milford in 1918 (printed by Thomas Foreman and Sons in Nottingham).
This charming illustration appears in chapter one of Wee Benjy Brown, published by Humphrey Milford in 1918 (printed by Thomas Foreman and Sons in Nottingham).
object details
Categories | |
Object Type | |
Additional Title | Wee Benjy Brown (published title) |
Materials and Techniques |
Watercolour and pen and ink on paper
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Brief Description |
Illustration in watercolour and pen and ink by Ernest Aris, dated 1916, published in chapter one of Wee Benjy Brown by Ernest Aris, published by Humphrey Milford and printed by Thomas Foreman and Sons in Nottingham, 1918.
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Physical Description |
Watercolour and pen and ink drawing of a gnome-like figure jumping, watched by a rabbit behind a tree.
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Production type | Unique |
Marks and Inscriptions |
Inscribed in ink on recto by Ernest Aris: Robin A. Hood 1916 (Robin A. Hood was a pseudonymn on Ernest Aris.)
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Object history |
Drawn by Ernest Aris in 1916 and published in chapter one of Wee Benjy Brown by Ernest Aris, published by Humphrey Milford and printed by Thomas Foreman and Sons in Nottingham, 1918. Given to the Museum in 2014.
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Literary Reference | Wee Benjy Brown |
Summary |
Alfred Ernest Walter George Aris (1882- 1963) was a highly prolific commercial illustrator in the first half of the 20th century. He studied at the Bradford School of Art and, later, at the Royal College of Art in London. He began his career as a portrait artist and art teacher, working in watercolour and charcoal and wash, and exhibited his work at the Royal Academy, Royal Society of British Artists and the Royal Institute of Painters in Watercolours. By 1909, Aris was illustrating for magazines such as The Graphic and writing and illustrating children’s books. He wrote and illustrated over 170 books (the majority published by Humphrey Milford and Hodder and Stoughton) and contributed illustrations to a further 250 titles. His illustrations were also used for advertisements, cigarette cards, games, jigsaw puzzles and seaside postcards. In 1934 Cadbury’s commissioned Aris to design the Cococubs, a collection of animal characters to be given away free with their children’s cocoa. It was hailed as one of the greatest advertising schemes of the time, with an estimated 300,000 children collecting them.
This charming illustration appears in chapter one of Wee Benjy Brown, published by Humphrey Milford in 1918 (printed by Thomas Foreman and Sons in Nottingham). |
Collection | |
Accession Number |
AR.11:55-2014
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record created | June 8, 2015 |
Record URL |