DAVID LOW - TYPED LETTER SIGNED 10/03/1957 - HFSID 53493
Price: $1,200.00
DAVID LOW. TLS: "David Low", 1p, 5¼x7. Kensington, 1957
October 3. On imprinted stationery to Mrs. Philip Astley, Edwardes Square.
In full: "How very kind of you to return my letter which had been
wrongly delivered to you. I agree the postal service in this district is
becoming scandalous. Any day now I expect to find some of my correspondence
blowing up the High Street. At least three times in the past fortnight I have
had other people's letters delivered at this address. I think perhaps I will
follow your suggestion and write to the G.P.O. Branch Manager. Thank you for
your courtesy. Yours sincerely". At the time he signed this letter, Low
was a political cartoonist for the "Manchester Guardian". New Zealand-born
British cartoonist David Low (1891-1963) is best known for his WWII-era
political cartoons. Low, who was inspired by the art in "Punch Magazine" (to
which he would later contribute), had his early cartoons published in magazines
and newspapers in his native New Zealand. At the age of 18, he was asked to join
the "Sydney Bulletin" in Australia. There, his work attracted the attention of
British writer Arnold Bennett, and in 1919 Low arrived in England to take a
job with "The Daily News" and the company's evening paper, "The Star". After
his tenure with "The Star", which included a commission to draw the portraits
of fifty of the most distinguished people in Britain (published as Low's
Company, Fifty Portraits in 1952), Low joined the staff of the "Evening
Standard", where he was promised complete freedom to express his radical
political views. He created his character, Colonel Blimp, who represented
everything that Low disliked about British politics, in 1934. In the late
1930s, Low's cartoons criticizing Adolf Hitler and Benito Mussolini
resulted in his work being banned in Germany and Italy. Although he was called a
"war-monger" because of his cartoons attacking appeasement, his works also
inspired the British people at a time when many feared a German victory. Low
became an official British War Artist, and, as such, attended the
Nuremberg War Trials with Joseph Flatter. After leaving the "Evening
Standard" in 1949, he later worked for the "Daily Herald" (1950-1953) and the
"Manchester Guardian" (1953-1963). Low, whose published works also include
Europe at War, A History in Sixty Cartoons with a Narrative Text (1941),
Years of Wrath: 1932-1945 (1946) and Low's Autobiography (1956),
was knighted in 1962. Slightly creased with fold, not at signature. Fine
condition.
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