Keep Calm and Don’t Sneeze

Keep Calm and Don't Sneeze Swine Flu

The world is gripped by the fear of Swine Flu, as the World Health Organisation upgrades the current level of pandemic alert from phase 4 to 5.  This does need to be kept in perspective as it is an unfortunate fact that thousands die every year from bog standard flu, and the current epidemic has not led to deaths in Europe at least.

Keep Calm and Carry On

However, this does give an option for the Keep Calm and Carry On to yet again be put to another use, and Zazzle is straight on it with “Keep Calm and Don’t Sneeze” – yet another clever use of the slogan, and its accompanied monetisation. They are not the only ones to pick up on the connection, as has Simon Calder, Jayne Dowle, Deborah Orr, Dan Ariely, South Wales Argus, Vince in  Vancouver, and The Moustacho. Thanks to @SimplerDave on Twitter for pointing this out to me via Twitter!

Coughs and Sneezes Spread Diseases

Just wondering how long before these images make their way out again (I’m giving a paper on this in September). I was talking about this with someone a couple of years ago, as the flu jab leaflets looked distinctly Second World War style – and I guess they were aimed at that generation! Meantime, watch this 1945 video.

English Heritage Posters

Bombadier Poster

 Have you seen these posters: “Drink England”? There’s a couple of them that I see every morning, and truly fits with Fougasse’s idea that they should be fully visible as you whizz past in a hurry, but if you have the time to move in closer, there’s a lot of detail to consider… it’s a really interesting juxtaposition of visuals to sum up “all that is great about Britain”?!

Forties Frugality is Back

pretWe mentioned before that the Imperial War Museum is re-using posters from the Second World War to encourage us into good habits to get through the recession! Following the Twitter feed of Mrs Sew & Sew, the campaign is definitely being noticed! 

Sarah Mower, Prêt-à-rapporter: This week: Forties frugality, cardie codes and the new nudes, 14 Apr 2009

More of Interest?
My Google Alerts is bringing in the usual run of online stores jumping on the bandwagon and selling the Keep Calm items, but a few other interesting odds and ends: 

Abram Games (b.1914, d.1996)

Abram Games official websiteAbram Games: Maximum Meaning, Minimum Means (Touring Exhibition)

I went to this exhibition when it first launched at the Design Museum in 2003… really interesting, and a real chance to get up close and personal with Abram Games’ iconic works (including the famous banned “blond bombshell”). I have also met Naomi Games a couple of times, who, a note to those of you who think that all Second World War posters are out of copyright… has renewed the copyright on all his works. See more on the official website: http://www.abramgames.com/

Til 16th May: The Museum of Lancashire.

6 June-6 September: Bedford Galley.

For More Information on the Artist: From: http://www.ww2poster.co.uk/artists/Games.htm

Of Jewish descent, Abram Games was born in London, the son of an artist photographer. A modernist graphic and industrial designer, he was mainly self-taught, attending St Martin’s School of Art for only six months, although he took evening classes whilst working for Askew-Younge, a commercial London studio between 1932 and 1936, before being fired ‘for his rebellious and undisciplined attitude’. In 1934 he came second in the Health Council Competition, and in 1935 he won a poster competition for London City Council. He then worked as a freelance poster artist from 1936 to 1940, designing posters for many commercial companies, including Shell, London Transport and the GPO.When working on a new design for a poster, Games would produce up to thirty small sketches for images, from which two or three would be combined towards the final idea. Games deliberately designed on a small scale, as he believed that posters needed to work from a distance, and if they “don’t work an inch high they will never work”. Sketches were shown to his family and friends, and those designs that drew a blank expression were rejected, with the most successful sketch scaled up to a painted ‘rough’. Only one idea was ever presented to a client, and if rejected, Games suggested that they employed another designer. If the design was accepted, the design would be enlarged, either by a photographer, or Games himself would project the image onto an easel. The finished design would be transferred to an art board, and hung on the studio wall for a week before receiving the stamp of approval, the full stop after his signature. Games insisted both on philosophical involvement with the subject matter, and on ‘being responsible for each poster in its entirety: the concept, the slogan, the copy, the design and the layout’. 

Although Games worked in his father’s photographic studio for two years before he worked for Askew-Younge, and was keenly interested in the mechanics of image reproduction, and the work of Man Ray and other pioneers of photo-montage, Games’ chosen tool was the airbrush (at least until the 1950s when it became difficult for the airbrush to compete with crisper photographic designs). Games collected vast quantities of photographic sources, but used them only as source material, with the airbrush ensuring that gestures and expressions fitted the purpose of the poster. Games also regularly visited the Royal College of Surgeons in London to ‘perfect his knowledge of human anatomy and his ability to draw the human body’.

In 1940 Games jointed the Infantry, but was recalled to the War Office in June 1941 to design a recruiting poster for the Royal Armoured Corps (RAC). Games had previously sent a memorandum ‘concerning the use of enlisted designers for Army instructional posters’. Having designed posters for the RAC and ATS, Games again proposed his idea, and was given the chance to put it into practice, with the knowledge that he would return to his unit if the idea failed. The experiment was so successful that in 1942 Games was offered the newly created poster of Official War Office Poster Designer. Art and Industry noted that Games’ peace-time work was ‘well-known’, and that he was ‘more usefully employed’ in public relations than in an infantry unit. In a later article, Games described that his experience in the Infantry had given him ‘an understanding of what the ranker thinks, does and, perhaps more important, does not do’, as the army mentality was different from that of the ‘outside world’.

On appointment, Games was given the rank of Lieutenant, and later Captain. Frank Newbould was appointed as his civilian assistant , also in 1942. Games designed over one-hundred posters before he left the War Office in 1946, including several that were adapted by the MOI for civilian use, and several that attracted controversy, including the ATS ‘glamour girl’ of 1941; the ABCA ‘Finsbury Health Centre’ Your Britain poster of 1942; and the Talk in Here poster of 1944, the first two of which were withdrawn. Games’ work was widely exhibited amount the allies during the war years, and his wartime work was discussed in many publications, including three times in Art and Industry, where he analysed his own work. In 1948 he wrote in Art and Industry: “I feel strongly that the high purpose of the wartime posters was mainly responsible for their excellence.”

Games married Marianne Selfeld in 1945, with whom he had one son and two daughters, and in 1946 he resumed his freelance practice, going ‘on to produce hundreds of posters for private and public organisations in Britain and Israel’. With a personal philosophy of ‘maximum meaning, minimum means’, his posters, adverts, symbols and stamps had a ‘distinctive conceptual and symbolic quality’. In 1951 Games was chosen to design the Festival of Britain logo. Other noted symbols he designed include the 1955 BBC Television and 1965 Queen’s Award for Industry logos. Games was a visiting lecturer in graphic design at the Royal College of Art, London between 1946 and 1953, and was appointed Royal Designer for Industry (RDI) in 1959.

In 1958 Games was awarded the OBE for services to graphic design. His work is highly collectable, particularly as most undistributed posters and originals were pulped by government order in 1946. Few works on Second World War propaganda are complete without at least one of Games’ designs, and on his death in 1991, obituaries followed in major newspapers. In 2003 an exhibition of his work was held at the Design Museum in London.

Imperial War Museum: Posters of Conflict

Imperial War Museum Posters of Conflict WebsiteImperial War Museum Poster Collection
Whilst researching my PhD I had great hopes of access to the Imperial War Museum’s poster collection, but was restricted to the few hundred in the onsite art collection (which are still an amazing collection) .

In 2002 however, Manchester Metropolitan University, under the leadership of James Aulich, received funding to digitise 10,000 posters from the collection. Digitised copies of the posters are available from the Imperial War Museum Collections online, and VADs (most subject to copyright/image rights, etc.).

Second World War posters continue to fascinate many!

National Archives: The Art of War

The National Archives: The Art of War
 
In 2005, whilst The National Archives were looking for artist biography material, they came across my website www.ww2poster.co.uk, read about my PhD thesis, and decided they needed my expertise. I was contracted in as an editorial consultant. It was a great opportunity to go behind the scenes at the National Archives (where “all” (well, about 3% per year) of government records are housed at Kew. I’d already spent weeks at the National Archives (along with weeks at Colindale, the Imperial War Museum and Mass-Observation, with shorter stints at other archives), but continued with some further research, and then wrote the following content for the site:

Saatchi and Saatchi
Kevin Roberts, CEO of Saatchi and Saatchi worldwide has picked up on the Keep Calm and Carry On poster (and I am pleased to say, has referenced my work, as did Barter Books in the first instance!)… it is an inspiring poster, particularly for 2009, even if it never came into play during the war years!

Keep Calm-o-Matic
Make your own version of the slogan using an online generator! No wonder there’s so many different versions out there… get parody-ing!  Here’s what I generated
!

Waste Not, Want Not: The Museum of Brands and Packaging

museum

The Robert Opie Collection
I have always enjoyed looking at Robert Opie’s collection of material, although I was unable to make use of it in my PhD, I definitely referred to it in a module I taught on ‘Advertising and Branding’ for Media Studies a few years ago, and have just surfed to see if collection is now more accessible, which it clearly now is. Robert Opie started collecting emphemeral material (especially packaging) at the age of 16, and maintained a collection in Gloucester, in 2005 transferring the material to London where he created the http://www.museumofbrands.com/, definitely high on my list of places to visit.  In teaching ‘Using Visual Material as Historical Sources’, we always start from the perspective of what can that material tell us at a surface level, and then start to go deeper, and this museum looks at the “history of consumer culture is revealed decade by decade in the “time tunnel”, from Victorian times to the present day. Discover the trends of daily life, the revolution in shopping habits, the groceries, sweets and household goods, the changes in taste and tempo, the advent of motoring, aviation, radio and television, the gradual emancipation of women and the effects of two world wars.”

Current Exhibition: Waste Not, Want Not
You already know about my obsession with war posters (I am notoriously fickle in my interests, but have been studying Second World War posters for 16 years, with associated interests in teaching/learning/personal development/the online world/Christianity and contemporary culture), so I’m very pleased to see that the current exhibition focuses on the 1940s: “Waste Not, Want Not, which draws parallels between the austerity practiced as a result of wartime shortages and the increasing importance of sustainability today.” I have been interested to see the increasing DEMONSTRATABLE relevance of history to modern life (after years when it appeared to be disappearing out of site), through the application of historical material to modern concerns, as this exhibition demonstates with eco-concerns, and new organisations such as History and Policy indicate. After presenting a paper at a Public History conference at Ruskin College (no ivory towers for us please!), I started to think about how I could re-use my material in the modern day. In December 2008 I attended a PR course with Chantal Cooke of Passion for the Planet, and started to pull together a press release as to how posters could be used to demonstrate the relevance of wartime thinking in the current recession… with my main focus on the jobs pages in newspapers/online, I hadn’t twigged the huge fuss that Keep Calm and Carry On was making, and it’s very exciting to see just how much these posters still DO resonate…. listen to the mock radio interview created on that day. So, I’m putting my interest in making knowledge accessible online in developing this blog, and resuming work on my other plans for publication!

London Transport Posters in Wartime

london_transport_postersLondon Transport Posters: A Century of Art and Design OK, so maybe I’m going for the easy entries over the next few days, but I’ve got plenty to add on bits and pieces. I tried to get my original research material out from storage today, but it’s going to have to wait…. I have lots materially digitally stored!

London Transport Museum’s Exhibition ‘The Art of the Poster‘ finished last week, and was accompanied by the book London Transport Posters: A Century of Art and Design, for which I wrote a chapter (finishing as much as I could do in an internet cafe in Melbourne, Australia!). London Transport Museum are notoriously protective of their copyright, so it was a great chance to continue some research on further posters… I still get excited when I see a poster I’ve not seen before, or even one I have seen before making it’s way into the modern public domain… such as the Keep Calm and Carry On posters! My thesis focused largely on posters produced by the Ministry of Information, but they called upon the expertise of organisations such as London Transport and Shell in the formation of the Ministry of Information, as these organisations had demonstrated a proficiency in publicity. It was also interesting to study First World War posters, to which I’d referred in my thesis (noting that they were far more King & Country whereas the Second World War was a much more democratic effort), as the chapter was about wartime posters, not just the Second World War. LTM had been working on digitising their poster collection whilst I was doing my PhD research, and the materials launched online whilst I was writing this chapter. My PhD research had turned up some really interesting information which the London Transport archives didn’t have (and I spent some time both in Covent Garden and the main archives, along with the V&A, and we had meetings out at Acton… some great materials stored there), so really felt I made a good contribution. My chapter ended up as a joint publication as David Bownes completed it whilst I was hopping around New Zealand, before I proof read it in the midst of Bolivia, after a great day blowing up dynamite in the silver mines, before returning in time for the book/exhibition launch in October!

Further Resources  (in no particular order)

Imperial War Museum recruits Mrs Sew and Sew

Mrs Sew and Sew on Twitter Mrs Sew and Sew Engages with New Technology
 
The other week I referred to the Imperial War Museum’s information ‘Top Tips for Tough Times‘, using advice from the 1940s to those of us stuck in the noughties recession. What they didn’t mention there (a trick missed, I feel), was that they had also set up a blog, and a Twitter feed… a real innovative use of modern technology to bring out relevant information from the 1940s. Anyone who thought my PhD was irrelevant… clearly wrong!  And having tracked down a number of public information shorts to use at conferences, the IWM is now uploading a number of great films to YouTube ! Listen to the creative agency: The Team talk about their work.

I love the start of this blog:

Hello m’ dears!

Mrs Sew&Sew here, reporting from the home front in 1943! The nice people at the Imperial War Museum (yes, it’s even around in our day) have given me a special typewriter, so I can send you telegrams from here. Don’t worry, we’ve set it up so your replies get sent through to me as well, so feel free to have a chat!…. I’ve heard there’s some kind of problem with the banks in 2009, so maybe some of these ideas will come in handy there too. Do let me know if you have any great ideas I can pass onto my neighbours. Or even if they’re not relevant in my time, let me know anyway, and I’ll pass them back to all the lovely people in your time.”

 

Advertiser’s Weekly, 4th April 1944, p.154 notes…
 
W.S.Crawford, Ltd invented the figure in order to humanise the ‘make-do-and-mend’ campaign. Made first appearance in the press on May 15, and will feature in forthcoming displays and posters. “Mrs Sew-and-Sew is a pleasant figure, rather like a ventriloquist’s dummy, with a cherubic smile. A wooden figure of her will be placed at the door of advice centres, inviting people to come in, and she will also appear in window displays and exhibitions. Copy for the first advert describes her as a ‘designing woman’. The campaign will then invite women to identify themselves with her domestic habits, and to follow her example in overcoming household difficulties.” 

British Library

Keep Calm and Carry On
A beautifully detailed entry by owentroy,  including all of the new police (Keep Calm inspired) posters… which I keep spotting when I don’t have a camera to hand!  
And the slogan has become so famous (in a way it never was in the Second World War), that it now has its own Wikipedia entry, and had been seen around Westminster, and compared to the anti-terrorism posters. See how many crazy variations have been created, all collated together on Flicrk!

Thesis is listed at the British Library

My thesis, available since June 2004 in the Library and RKE Centre at the University of Winchester, at the Imperial War Museum, and at the Mass Observation Archives, was requested by the British Library earlier this year for digitisation (they should have asked me, I have it on CD!), so can be seen on the computers at the British Library, St Pancras. Still surprised my thesis hasn’t been picked up more by the press, but then I’ve been abroad for most of the past 2 years, and only now getting back to grips with my research and looking at ways of publishing it…  although even whilst travelling I managed to complete a chapter for the London Transport Museum, and pre-trip wrote an article for the Second World War Experience Centre.

Another BNP Poster: What Would Jesus Do?

As I’m working my way through “What Would Google Do?“, and spotting those reuses of other posters… discussing with others how the BNP have taken on board the Keep Calm and Carry On message… I received a copy of this blog entry by the Unfinished Christian (aren’t we all?!), extract:

“The poster has been condemned by various church groups and in West Yorkshire the Ecumenical Council has mounted a counter campaign with the slogan- “Use your cross- Vote for hope in Yorkshire” to mobilise voters to keep out the BNP saying; ” The Christian vision of society is one where each person is treated with dignity and respect, whatever their face or religion. It is a vision of hope.” Christ’s message was indeed one of hope, love, inclusion and justice.  Jesus suggested that loving God and our neighbours as ourselves was central to his outlook on how we should live our lives if we were serious about bringing in his kingdom, so let’s check these things out in the BNP manifesto for the Euro elections.”

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