BETA

Illustrations to a children's book

Drawing
1921 (drawn)
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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.

Aris was profoundly influenced by Joel Chandler Harris’s Uncle Remus stories. The narrative depicted in these drawings is similar to Aris’s Uncle Toby Tale, The Story of Ginger Hare (1921), in which the wood-folk’s daily trips to Farmer Hayseed’s garden to steal vegetables are thwarted by the sudden appearance of a scarecrow.


object details
Categories
Object Type
Materials and Techniques
Watercolour, pen and ink and pencil on paper
Brief Description
Two illustrations in watercolour, pen and ink and pencil by Ernest Aris.
Physical Description
Two sketches on one sheet of paper, side by side. Watercolour, pencil and pen and ink drawings of scenes from a children's book depicting a rabbit chopping down a scarecrow and an old rabbit conversing with other animals characters.
Production type Unique
Marks and Inscriptions
Inscribed in ink on recto by each drawing: Ernest Aris
Object history
Drawn by Ernest Aris. Lent to the Museum for an exhibition in 2016 and subsequently given to the Museum in 2016 as part of the Ernest Aris Archive gifted in 2014.
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.



Aris was profoundly influenced by Joel Chandler Harris’s Uncle Remus stories. The narrative depicted in these drawings is similar to Aris’s Uncle Toby Tale, The Story of Ginger Hare (1921), in which the wood-folk’s daily trips to Farmer Hayseed’s garden to steal vegetables are thwarted by the sudden appearance of a scarecrow.
Collection
Accession Number
AR.11:58-2014

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record created July 13, 2016
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