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The Brother Who Turned the Gas Full On

Poster
1943 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Colour offset lithograph poster showing a man standing, holding a paper with his back to a gas fire, which radiates heat, his sister and a small dog look scornfully at him. 'The Brother Who Turned the Gas Full On. Save Fuel to Make Munitions for Battle' lettered in red and black. All against a white ground.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleThe Brother Who Turned the Gas Full On
Materials and techniques
Colour offset lithography
Brief description
'The Brother Who Turned the Gas Full On. Save Fuel to Make Munitions for Battle'. Colour offset lithograph poster designed by Henry Mayo Bateman and issued by the Ministry of Fuel and Power during the Second World War. Great Britain, 1943.
Physical description
Colour offset lithograph poster showing a man standing, holding a paper with his back to a gas fire, which radiates heat, his sister and a small dog look scornfully at him. 'The Brother Who Turned the Gas Full On. Save Fuel to Make Munitions for Battle' lettered in red and black. All against a white ground.
Dimensions
  • Height: 76.5cm
  • Width: 51cm
Measurements taken from: Summary Catalogue of British Posters to 1988 in the Victoria & Albert Museum in the Department of Design, Prints & Drawing. Emmett Publishing, 1990. 129 p. ISBN: 1 869934 12 1
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'THE BROTHER WHO TURNED THE GAS FULL ON / SAVE FUEL / TO MAKE MUNITIONS / FOR BATTLE / ISSUED BY THE MINISTRY OF FUEL AND POWER / PRINTED FOR H.M. STATIONERY OFFICE BY [F]OSH & CROSS LTD. LONDON ...'
  • Signed.
Credit line
Given by Ogilvy Benson & Mather Ltd
Historical context
Breaches of etiquette and 'good form' were the favourite subjects of cartoonist and social satirist H.M. Bateman. His talent for dramatising the 'gaffe' was cleverly chosen by the Government to illustrate a series of wartime posters encouraging voluntary fuel economies in British homes.

With many people fighting and others working long factory shifts, it was thought reasonable for those on 'The Home Font' to make some contribution to the war effort. In this design, a selfish brother is rebuked by his patriotic sister for wasting town gas (and indirectly its source, coal) needed to fuel the nation's armament factories. The old-fashioned chimney piece and primitive gas fire suggest that Bateman, ever alert to such matters, intended to depict a household of a lower social class to that shown in E.158-1973.

[Kevin Edge, 'British Design at Home', p.130]
Production
Printed for H.M. Stationery Office by Fosh & Cross Ltd., London.
Subjects depicted
Associated objects
Bibliographic reference
Summary Catalogue of British Posters to 1988 in the Victoria & Albert Museum in the Department of Design, Prints & Drawing. Emmett Publishing, 1990. 129 p. ISBN: 1 869934 12 1
Collection
Accession number
E.148-1973

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Record createdFebruary 14, 2000
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