Available Formats
The British
By (Author) Pont
Duckworth Books
Duckworth
1st January 2012
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
741.5942
Hardback
192
Width 185mm, Height 240mm
An assertion of the importance of tea. A keen interest in the weather. A fondness for laughing at our own anecdotes. A weakness for oak beams. A tendency to over-indulge dogs. The British haven t changed much since the 1930s when Pon s first witty and hilarious observations on the national character appeared in Punch magazine.Pont's plump rolling-pin-wielding cooks and bowler-hatted imperialists capture a distinct moment in British inter-war history, but his observations of character are timeless. In the nursery, at the opera, or in the bath, in tweed or tennis whites or Sunday best, Pont conjures distinct, complete personalities with a few strokes of his pen.Charming, idiosyncratic and above all wonderfully funny, this unforgettable collection will bring Pons extraordinary talent to a new generation of fans.
'Includes Pont's most famous sequence, The British Character, in which, with beautiful wit, he illustrated national characteristics prevalent at the time... Some of Pont's cartoons seem amazingly prescient, almost as though they had been drawn only yesterday'Craig Brown, Daily Mail
'Pont's penmanship is an appealing mixture of rough, scribbly shading, block black shadows, and exquisitely fine detail in the right places'Guardian
'Like the best moderns he infuses character into every curve of a rump or tilt of an eyebrow, adding tiny jokes in every corner'Libby Purves
'Pont specialised in portraying the English middle classes, and most of his jokes are still as pointful today as they were in the Thirties ... brilliantly observant drawings' Oldie
'Tremendously popular ...hilarious and brilliantly observed work'Sunday Express
'Pure visual comedy'Independent
'Pont' (Graham Laidler) was born in 1908. His pseudonym derived from a nickname, Pontifex Maximus, acquired during a visit to Rome. Following his family s wishes, he trained as an architect, but by his mid-twenties had become one of Puncs most prolific and successful cartoonists. He published several collections, the most popular of which being The British Character, which lampoons the national foibles of the British. Pont suffered from TB, and died in 1940 of at the age of 32, leaving behind some four hundred cartoons.