Andrzej Krauze

Andrzej Krauze
Born 7 March 1947
Dawidy Bankowe, Poland
Nationality British
Education Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw
Known for Cartoon, drawing, illustration, caricature, painting, poster design, satire
Awards Victoria and Albert Museum Award for Illustration (1996); Ranan Lurie Political Cartoon Award (2002–03)

Andrzej Krauze (born 7 March 1947[1]) is a Polish-born British cartoonist, illustrator, caricaturist, painter, poster designer[2] and satirist noted for his allegorical, fabulous, symbolic and sometimes scary imagery, as well as his reliance on black ink, bold lines and cross-hatching.[3][4] His illustrations have been a regular fixture[2] in the British national daily newspaper The Guardian since 1989,[3] and he has also contributed to the English-language newspapers and magazines The New York Times, The Sunday Telegraph, The Times, International Herald Tribune, New Scientist, The Independent on Sunday, The Bookseller, New Statesman, Modern Painters, Campaign, The Listener[1] and New Society.[2] He won the Victoria and Albert Museum Award for Illustration in 1996,[1] and the Ranan Lurie Political Cartoon Award in 2003.[5]

Life and career

Early life and career in Poland

Andrzej Krauze was born in Dawidy Bankowe,[6] a village in east-central Poland, on 7 March 1947.[1] His father was a small trader and there was no artistic tradition in the family. But his elder brother had become a film director and Krauze intended to follow him. Film school demanded a degree, so Krauze, who had always loved drawing,[2] began studying painting and illustration at the Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw in 1967. In 1971, while still a student, he started contributing cartoons to the Polish satirical magazine Szpilki and won first prize in a poster design competition organised by the National Theatre in Warsaw for whom he then worked as a poster designer until 1973, when he graduated. His diploma submission, an animated film entitled The Flying Lesson,[1] was suppressed as anti-Polish[2] and not shown publicly until 2010,[7] but his growing success marked the end of his original ambition to become a film director,[2] and, after graduating, he continued contributing to Szpilki and began working as a political cartoonist for the weekly magazine Kultura.[1] Many of his cartoons were censored, but Krauze found this a creative challenge and spent the next six years irritating the censors and entertaining his readers. "He was a cult artist," recalled Wojciech Chmurzynski, director of Warsaw's Museum of Caricature, in 2001: "He was very important to [Polish] people in the 1970s, and his ... cartoons were universally known." Zuzanna Lipinska, daughter of the Museum of Caricature's founder, agrees: "Cartoons were important because there were a lot of things that couldn't be said directly, so people had to find metaphorical ways of saying them. [Krauze] was expressing the younger generation's discontent with the regime... He caught the tragicomic reality of Poland; the absurdity of Polish life."[2]

Career in Europe and move to London

By the end of the 1970s, Krauze decided to try his luck abroad. He continued to contribute to Kultura,[2] but in 1979 he moved to Paris and, after only a month, to London. After a year there, however, the Home Office refused to extend his visa,[8] forcing him to move to Amsterdam in 1980, where he worked as an illustrator for the Dutch newspaper NRC Handelsblad. From Amsterdam he moved back to Paris once again, where he contributed to the French magazines L'Express, L'Expansion and Lire[1] in 1981.[9] When martial law was declared in Poland in December 1981, he was once again in London organising an exhibition of his drawings. As he later recalled, "I said to myself, if I am a political cartoonist, this is my time. I only had a one-week tourist visa to begin with, but after martial law I published a lot of drawings in English, American and French newspapers, and immediately it was impossible to return [to Poland]. The borders were closed, it was very difficult to send journalists to Poland, there were no photographs coming out, and I was one of the few artists who could draw without fear."[2]

Career in Great Britain

Krauze remained in London and became a British citizen.[2] Between 1986 and 1990 he designed posters for London's Old Vic theatre, then under the directorship of Jonathan Miller, and began contributing cartoons and illustrations to the New Statesman in 1988,[1] The Guardian in 1989, and The Independent on Sunday in 1990.[3] He has also contributed to the English-language newspapers and magazines The New York Times, The Sunday Telegraph, The Times, International Herald Tribune, New Scientist, The Bookseller, Modern Painters, Campaign, The Listener[1] and New Society.[2] He won the Victoria and Albert Museum Award for Illustration in 1996, was appointed external examiner by the Royal College of Art in 1997,[1] and was awarded the Ranan Lurie Political Cartoon Award by the United Nations Correspondents Association in 2003.[5]

Critical responses to work

Cultural historian Patrick Wright, whose book On Living in an Old Country (1985) Krauze illustrated, recalls of Krauze's early work that it was "like nothing else in Britain at that time... Many of [his drawings] were defiantly crude onslaughts, which used strong ink lines and ferocious cross-hatching to emphasise the violence of the Communist state and then hurl it back in the face of the regime... [H]is eye seemed harsher, and sometimes frankly disrespectful of the foibles and eccentricities of British life. His drawings lacked the cool 'designer' cynicism of an age increasingly defined by advertising imagery... [He was] an illustrator with a more distanced eye than was customary in English illustration."[4]

Alan Rusbridger, editor of The Guardian, has similarly commented that Krauze "helped introduce an intelligence and sophistication into serious British illustration."[10]

Journalist Francis Wheen has written of Krauze that "whatever [his] subject ... his ironic, cosmopolitan intelligence never fails to enlighten... Krauze can do caricatures and jokes, of course, but his real genius lies in the creation of vivid metaphor... absurd, sometimes scary imagery that owes more to writers such as Bulgakov or Alfred Jarry than to Jak or Mac... this is a man who both works hard and thinks hard, as proved by his dozens of brilliantly apt drawings in the book Introducing The Enlightenment [2000]... Krauze is both an artist and an intellectual; but he wears his learning lightly. Like all good intellectuals, he keeps Occam's razor within easy reach, ready to slash through obfuscation and reveal a plain truth in all its simplicity – or perhaps one should say 'in black and white', since he employs black ink more tellingly than any other illustrator I know... this remarkable artist has always accepted the duty that is more traditionally assigned to journalists, though many of them prefer to duck the challenge: he speaks truth to power."[3]

Selected books illustrated by Andrzej Krauze

Children's books

External links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 1.7 1.8 1.9 "Andrzej Krauze". British Cartoon Archive. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 2.9 2.10 Stephen Moss (17 October 2001). "Spitting images". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Francis Wheen (8 March 2003). "Master of his art". The Guardian. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  4. 4.0 4.1 Patrick Wright (17 November 2007). "Andrzej Krauze comes to London" (PDF). PatrickWright.net. Retrieved 24 February 2013.
  5. 5.0 5.1 "UN award for cartoonist". The Guardian. 18 November 2003. Retrieved 2 March 2013.
  6. "Andrzej Krauze 'Trzy Dekady'" [Andrzej Krauze 'Three Decades'] (in Polish). Biuro Wystaw Artystycznych w Jeleniej Górze. Retrieved 23 February 2013.
  7. Krauze, Andrzej (2010). The Sleep of Reason... Drawings 1970–1989. Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. p. 4. ISBN 978-83-7629-129-1. A DVD version of a film entitled The Flying Lesson (1973, dir. Andrzej Krauze) from the Studio Miniatur Filmowych is attached
  8. Krauze, Andrzej (2010). The Sleep of Reason... Drawings 1970–1989. Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. p. 73. ISBN 978-83-7629-129-1. On 14 August 1979, I left Poland ... After a month spent in Paris we headed for London. ... After a year, however, the Home Office re-fused to extend our visas and we were obliged to leave England.
  9. Krauze, Andrzej (2010). The Sleep of Reason... Drawings 1970–1989. Instytut Pamięci Narodowej. p. 73. ISBN 978-83-7629-129-1. in January 1981 returned to Paris.
  10. Alan Rusbridger. "Andrzej Krauze: Drawings 1970–2003". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 March 2013.