Keep Calm and Party On

Keep Calm and Party OnKeep Calm & Party On Launch: Saturday, 05 September 2009 at 19:00
Meet ~ Chat ~ Drinkies ~ Dance

Keep Calm & Party On is what you have always been looking for!….Keep Calm & Party On is South London’s friendliest club-bar night with DJ’s spinning some drastic-plastic. Artisan & Vine is a swish bar 5 mins from Clapham Junction where on the first Saturday of every month you can meet up with your friends, chat and jig around a bit. Nardia, Ben and Jen got fed up with searching for the perfect bar with laid-back, friendly vibes and great Music…so decided to launch their own monthly soiree!

Resident + guest DJ’s: Ranvir (Universal Taal Project, Frequency Tribe Records); Benson (Clubland); spinning an eclectic mix of upfront Soul-Jazz, Funky House, Breaks and HipHop

@ Artisan & Vine, 126 St John’s Hill, Battersea SW11

7pm till late, No Cover

Clapham Junction Station ~ turn right ~ 5 mins up the hill

Email: keepcalmandpartyon@hotmail.com
Facebook Group: Keep Calm and Party On

Keep Calm and Carry On Apron

Keep Calm and Carry On in the KitchenKeeping Calm and Carrying OnSo, for a week in the Loire Valley, I cooked for 83 people on 4 gas burners (2 of which were rather temperamental), including a vegetarian option! Despite Marvin’s apron of Master Chef (:-)) I was Chief Cook on this trip – responsible for ensuring that the meal was ready roughly on time, enough to go round, and didn’t make anyone sick! Lots of responsibility, eh?

So, before I went, having left my trusty Stork apron at home (it’s all about advertising, baby!), I decided to get a KCCO apron from Barter Books, to remind us every time it looked like the plan wasn’t going to come together… and it always calmed us down, focused us on the task in hand, and we achieved it all! Got plenty of conversations going too, especially with regards to how it would translate from a Biblical perspective.

To the left: Marvin & I “serve up”    To the right: Liz & I chop up (she wasn’t freaked by the knife at all!)

Apron Review: The apron was good quality, with an extremely handy front pocket (I had it full of cooking notes, tin-openers, pens, etc. most of the week, washed/dried easily (but watch out for the red leakage to begin with), adjustable neck length, and long waist-band. Great!

Outbreak 1939, Imperial War Museum, London

Outbreak 1939

20 August 2009 to 6 August 2010. Free admission.

“At 11.15am on 3 September 1939, the British public heard Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain announce that Britain and France were at war with Germany.

Seventy years after the announcement that signified the start of the Second World War and changed the lives of millions, this special exhibition explores how being a nation at war shaped the lives of ordinary men and women as well as those who were actively involved in the political negotiations and their aftermath. Historical material and personal memorabilia will illustrate the build-up to war, an hour-by-hour countdown of events on 3 September, and the early months of the conflict.”

Great online poster gallery, with explanation on a number of posters, some of which I recognise! 22nd October, get an exclusive tour with Terry Charman.

The Independent has already given a review, to which I have responded that it’s rather strange if the Imperial War Museum have put Keep Calm and Carry On up as posters from 1939… that’ll be one to address in Creating and Consuming history module in Semester 2! Culture 24 also has an expanded article with a lot of interesting information!

Why Keep Calm and Carry On Now?

Keep Calm and Carry On

An article on household decorating highlights the current popularity of “Keep Calm and Carry On”

Alain Samson, a social psychologist at the London School of Economics, says that people currently find the poster’s words “positive and reassuring in a period of uncertainty, anxiety, and even perhaps of cynicism”.

Read more in this interesting article, which also explains (obliquely) why Cath Kidston has just opened a new store in Winchester (which always seems to be teeming with people coming out with bags!)

Keep Calm and Have Lunch

Keep Calm and Have Lunch

I thought these lunchbags (that must be an American thing, guess we stick with the lunch-boxes) were pretty cool. I even bought some! Keep Calm poster and Food – what else can a girl be known for!

BBC: Pitching for “The One Show”

Below is an abstract I have submitted to “The One Show” – who knows if it will get picked up or not, they may already have something lined up, but worth an email (or few!)

“September 3rd 2009 marks the 70th anniversary of the outbreak of the Second World War.

In 2000 a poster was discovered in the bottom of a box of books, bought at auction by a book-seller in Alnwick.  The poster, designed by the Ministry of Information in 1939, was intended to be posted in the event of an invasion.  It was (probably) distributed around the country in the same way that other posters were – to post offices, train stations, etc.  Two other posters in the series “Your Courage, Your Cheerfulness, Your Resolution will bring Us Victory” and “Freedom is in Peril, Defend it with all your Might” were posted widely.  But as Britain was never invaded, “Keep Calm and Carry On” was never used.

Until now…!

The poster has had a resurgence, particularly since November 2008, when the credit crunch really hit, with many using it as a mantra to get through their daily lives.  Catching the mood of the nation it has been widely distributed, copied onto mugs, T shirts and student walls.

DR BEX LEWIS

Dr Bex Lewis is an expert on 2nd World War propaganda posters.  Her blog http://ww2poster.wordpress.com/ gets many hits about “Keep Calm and Carry On” and it’s variations (which include “Now Panic and Freak Out!”)

Bex Lewis completed her PhD entitled “The planning, design and reception of British Home Front propaganda posters of the Second World War” in June 2004 (examined by Asa Briggs) at the University of Winchester.  She is currently a Lecturer in History, and Associate Lecturer in Media Studies at the University of Winchester.”

Sidney ‘George’ Strube (b.1891; d.1956)

Sidney (George) Strube

Born in Bishopsgate, London, Strube first worked as a draughtsman for a furniture company before joining a small advertising agency. He studied at the John Hassal Art School after which he began producing cartoons. He sold his first work to the Conservative and Unionist magazine in 1909, soon after which he began producing a weekly cartoon for Throne and Country. From 1912 to 1948 Strube was the Daily Express’s editorial cartoonist. For many of those years, the paper had the largest circulation in the world, and Strube became the most popular cartoonist of the inter-war period. He ridiculed the Nazis and thus found the Daily Express being banned in the nineteen-thirties in Germany, and himself of their hitlist during the Second World War. Strube was a notable member of the London Sketch Club in the 1930s.

Information taken from: ‘Political Cartoon Society’, http://www.politicalcartoon.co.uk/html/exhibition.html, Accessed 16 August 2002, and ‘Sidney Strube’, http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/Jstrube.htm, Accessed 16 August 2002; Farman, J., ‘galleryonthegreen.co.uk’,http://www.galleryonthegreen.co.uk/mainfiles/sketch/history.htm, accessed October 03 2003. See alsohttp://www.socialaffairsunit.org.uk/blog/archives/000264.php, accessed 28 January 2005.

Related Texts:

E McKnight Kauffer (b.1890; d.1954)

E McKnight Kauffer on Google Images

Edward McKnight Kauffer was born in Great Falls, Montana. From 1911 to 1913 he studied evening classes in art at the Mark Hopkins Institute, San Francisco. In 1913 he spent six months at the Chicago Art Institute, at which time he attended the controversial ‘Armory Show’, which ‘introduced modern European art to a sceptical US public’. Also in 1913, he studied painting in Paris (and Munich), sponsored by Professor McKnight of the University of Utah, whose name he took in gratitude. On the outbreak of war in 1914, Kauffer moved to London, and in 1913 he was commissioned by Frank Pick to design his initial poster for London Underground, the first of many.Kauffer exhibited as a painter in England until 1921, when he transferred his attention to commercial art. Associated with the Cumberland Market Group and the Vorticists, this painting experience stood him in good stead. He ‘insisted that commercial art could and should reflect the progressive styles of the period’, and was familiar with modern art, particularly influenced by cubism, fauvism, art deco and futurism (including his famous ‘Flight of Birds’, used as a Daily Herald poster in 1919. In 1924, Kauffer wrote The Art of the Poster, and in the 1920s, he became chief poster designer for London Underground, for whom he designed over 140 posters. He also designed posters for Shell, British Petroleum, Eastman and Sons, and Mosley’s British Union of Fascists. In 1921, Kauffer designed a book jacket for Lytton Strachey’s Eminent Victorians, the first of a series of designs and illustrations for Nonesuch Press, and Faber and Gwyer. Kauffer also designed stage designs, murals and textiles, including a 1929 rug exhibition with Marion Dom, to become one of his two wives. In 1930 he became art director of the publishing house Lund Humphries.

In 1937 the Museum of Modern Art in New York held a one man exhibition of Kauffer’s work. In March 1939, Kauffer wrote some of his thoughts on poster design for Advertising Monthly. In 1940 Kauffer returned to work in New York, producing several posters for Greek War Relief and the US Treasury. Post-war Kauffer designed for American Airlines between 1947 and 1948, and the New York Subway Advertising Co. Inc. and publisher Alfred A. Knopf from 1949. On the occasion of his death, Havinden discussed the influence of Kauffer on graphic design in Art and Industry, including eighteen months working for Sir William Crawford’s advertising agency (where Ashley Havinden also worked). Crawford was ‘well-known as an advocate of modern advertising design’. Exhibitions of Kauffer’s work were organised by the Museum of Modern Art, New York in 1937, and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London in 1955. A collection of his work as a commercial designer and illustrator, from 1913 to 1950, is held at the National Art Library.

Information taken from: Livingston, A. and Livingston, I., Dictionary of Graphic Design and Designers, 1992, p.110, London Transport Museum Database, February 2000, quoting Riddell, 1994, Darracott, J. and Loftus, B., Second World War Posters, 1981 (1972), p.38, McKnight Kauffer. E., ‘I have not returned to my earlier poster style, but…’, Advertising Monthly, March 1939, pp.14-15, Havinden, A., ‘E. McKnight Kauffer’, Art and Industry, Vol. 58, No. 344, February 1955, pp.38-43, National Art Library, ‘AAD Holdings’, http://www.nal.vam.ac.uk/aad/aadalpha.html, accessed August 28 2003

Related Texts:

  • Haworth-Booth, M., E.McKnight-Kauffer: A Designer and His Public, 1979

See original post. Read more about him on the LTM site.

Reginald Mount (b.1906; d.1979)

Reginald MountBorn Edward Reginald Mount, before the Second World War Mount worked in advertising agencies such as Greenly’s and Lintas. On the outbreak of war Mount joined the MOI, designing many posters for campaigns, in particular security, salvage, diphtheria immunisation, and the anti-VD campaign of 1943-44. Mount tended to use neat and precise designs, was noticeable for his skilful use of photo-montage, and sometimes wrote his own copy. He worked with Evans, Eileen during the war, and then continued to produce varied work with her at the COI, where he was a consultant designer for the Art Services Section on a part-time basis. They produced award-winning posters for anti-smoking and road safety, whilst he continued to produce freelance work in house-styling, packaging, publicity and exhibition design. Particularly associated with the CIO, they produced information graphics and public service notices for a wide variety of government agencies’ Mount’s work was discussed in an Art and Industry article in 1950, particularly with regard to his belief that the artist’s ideas should be fit for purpose. In the 1950s, Reginald Mount was represented by Artist Partners, Ltd. Papers from c.1953 to 1981, covering joint graphic design work with Eileen Evans, are held at the National Art Library.

Information taken from: Darracott, J. and Loftus, B., Second World War Posters, 1981 (1972), p.47, Rennies Vintage Posters, ‘Rennies- Posters of Reginald Mount and Eileen Evans’, http://www.rennart.co.uk/mountevans.html, accessed August 28 2003, Whittet, G.S., ‘Designer Reginald Mount’, Art and Industry, Vol. 49, No.290, August 1950, pp.48-53, Artist Partners ‘ap retro’, http://www.artistpartners.com/mainpages/ap_retro.html, accessed August 28 2003, National Art Library, ‘AAD Holdings’, http://www.nal.vam.ac.uk/aad/aadalpha.html, accessed August 28 2003

Related Links

See original post.

H.A. Rotholtz (b.1919, d.2001)

H.A. Rotholtz on Google ImagesDuring the Second World War Rotholtz designed posters for the ‘Make your money provide the driving power’ campaign for the Post Office in 1943, and spent some time serving overseas. On his return to Britain he produced designs for trade-marks, press advertisements, brochures, posters and display units. His surname was sometimes spelt Rothholtz, and he often signed his work aR (The poster ‘Be in the fashion, cover your hair’, depicting factory chimneys and women in head-coverings is signed aR, and in ‘The Poster in War-Time Britain’, Art and Industry, Vol.35, No.205, July 1943, p.12, the poster is attributed to Rotholtz.)

Information taken from: ‘G.P.O. Follows up Appeal to Public’, Advertiser’s Weekly, August 26 1943, p.264, London Transport Museum Database, February 2000, Anonymous, ‘The Poster in War-Time Britain’, Art and Industry, Vol.35, No.205, July 1943, p.12.

See original post. Read more biographical information on the LTM site, and visit his archive at the University of Brighton.

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