John Glashan

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John Glashan (born John McGlashan, 24 December 1927 - 15 June 1999), Scottish cartoonist, illustrator, and playwright, creator of "Genius".

Glashan's cartoons typically included small pen-and-ink figures drawn over a fabulous backdrop often featuring fantastic (Gothic/imaginary) architecture, surreal landscapes, or gloriously impractical ingenious-looking machines.

Contents

[edit] Life and work

Born in Glasgow and the son of a portrait painter, McGlashan studied painting at the Glasgow School of Art after national service in the army. He moved to London with the intention of making a living from painting portraits, but was unable to do so. Switching to cartooning and illustrating, he curtailed his name to "Glashan".

Glashan's cartoons appeared in Lilliput, Harpers & Queen, Private Eye, Punch, and various London newspapers, as well as Holiday and the New Yorker.

A series of humorous guidebooks created with Jonathan Routh in the late 1960s (and described more fully in the article on Routh) allowed extensive expression of Glashan's graffiti-like style, combining small figures (often bearded men) with scrawled text -- but even here, often with elaborate backdrops.

"Genius", which allowed Glashan to use color and a great expanse of space, ran in the Observer Magazine from 1978 to 1983, whereupon Glashan concentrated on landscape painting. His cartoons reappeared from 1988 in the Spectator.

[edit] Publications by Glashan

[edit] Books by Glashan alone

  • The Eye of the Needle. London: Dennis Dobson, 1961. A hardback of about eighty (unnumbered) pages. Some stories spread over as many as seven pages; many others are just single frames. Glashan's style already seems fully formed: little bearded men (by themselves, in small groups, or even in their thousands) are rendered even smaller by lovingly drawn but oppressive neo-renaissance or rococo backdrops. In the inner rear flap, we are told that Glashan was previously a brain surgeon. Much, perhaps all of the content of the book had previously appeared in Lilliput (a fact that goes unmentioned).
  • Speak Up You Tiny Fool. New York: Dial, 1966. A hardback of about ninety (unnumbered) pages, in a larger format than The Eye of the Needle and duplicating much of the content of the earlier book, with additions. Jules Feiffer provides an introduction.
  • The Penguin John Glashan. Harmondsworth, Middx: Penguin, 1967. A paperback of about a hundred (unnumbered) pages, duplicating much of Speak Up You Tiny Fool.
  • Private Eye Cartoon Library 7: The Jokes of John Glashan. London: Private Eye & André Deutsch, 1975. ISBN 0-233-96723-0 (On the front cover: "Private Eye Cartoon Library 7 / John Glashan / The Meths Festival and Other Celebrations".) Contains about one hundred (unnnumbered) pages of cartoons, of which most were drawn from the book rather than reproduced from Private Eye (or so the copyright page informs us). Perhaps three quarters of the book is devoted to "The Meths Festival and other celebrations", a very shaggy dog story about what transpires during one annual festival held in "the sleepy pig iron town of Grinding Mallet", a grim place whose every brick is lovingly delineated. While the Head Methner of the Meth Chateau shows around an appreciative group of Japanese businessmen, festival-goer Filbert learns to walk with his head tilted to one side. But the story defies summarization.
  • John Glashan's World. London: Robinson, 1991. ISBN 1-85487-104-8

[edit] Books illustrated by Glashan

  • Tonight and Other Nights. By Alistair Sampson. London: Dennis Dobson, 1959.
  • The Perpetual Pessimist: An Everlasting Calendar of Gloom and Almanac of Woe. By Sagittarius and Daniel George. London: Hutchinson, 1963.
  • Refer to Drawer. By Nicholas Luard and Dominick Elwes. London: Arthur Barker, 1964.
  • Sex and the Single Girl. By Helen Gurley Brown. London: Four Square, 1964. (This edition has "£ove $tory", an unpaginated 32-page supplement by Glashan, between pages 128 and 129.)
  • The Good Loo Guide: Where to Go in London. By Jonathan Routh with Brigid Segrave. London: Wolfe, 1965. Second (expanded) edition: Wolfe, 1968.
  • Good Cuppa Guide: Where to Have Tea in London. By Jonathan Routh. London: Wolfe, 1966.
  • Guide Porcelaine to the Loos of Paris. By Jonathan Routh. London: Wolfe, 1966. French translation: Guide Porcelaine des "lieux" de Paris (Editions de la Jeune Parque, 1967).
  • The Better John Guide: Where to Go in New York. By Jonathan Routh with Serena Stewart. New York: Putnam, 1966
  • The Best of Private Eye. London: Private Eye, André Deutsch, 1976.
  • Private Eye's pSecond Book of Pseuds. Ed. Richard Ingrams. London: Private Eye, André Deutsch, 1977. ISBN 0-233-96945-4
  • Sweet and Sour: An Anthology of Comic Verse. Ed. Christopher Logue. London: Batsford, 1983. ISBN 0-7134-3792-8
  • Small Parts in History. By Sam Llewellyn. London: Sidgwick & Jackson, 1985.
  • Journal of a Collector. By Alistair McAlpine. London: Pavilion, 1994. ISBN 1-85793-433-4

[edit] Partial list of anthologies including cartoons by Glashan

[edit] Partial list of plays by Glashan

  • "Balance Wheel: A play in one act." In About Town, August 1962.

[edit] External links