Second Innings cover art (Original)

Second Innings cover art art by John Jensen

Second Innings cover art (Original)


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Artist: John Jensen
Medium: Watercolour on Board
Size: 9" x 13" (240mm x 320mm)
Date: 1990
Code: JensenInnings

This is the unique original Watercolour painting by John Jensen.

A select team of 18 humorous cricketing stories edited by Pete Haining and published by Souvenir Press in 1990.

The original art for the cover of the book Laughter Before Wicket - Second Innings.

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  • Artist Biography
    John Jensen (8 August 1930 - mid 2018)
    John Jensen was born John Gibson in Sydney, Australia, on 8 August 1930, the son of the cartoonist Jack Gibson. He later adopted his stepfather's surname, and from 1946 to 1947 studied at the Julian Ashton Art School, Sydney. Jensen's first cartoon was published in the Sydney Sun in 1946 and he then began freelancing as a cartoonist for publications such as Australia National Journal and Pertinent.

    In 1950 Jensen worked his passage to England as messboy on the SS Fred Christiansen, and was briefly an actors' dresser at London's Piccadilly Theatre, before becoming a full-time cartoonist. From 1951 to 1953 he drew pocket cartoons, caricatures and illustrations for the Birmingham Gazette, and in 1953 contributed his first cartoon to Punch. He then worked from 1953 to 1956 as staff cartoonist for a Scottish news and picture agency called Scotnews Ltd, also producing a daily "Laughlines" cartoon for the Glasgow Bulletin, and daily pocket cartoons signed "Gibby" for the Glasgow Evening Times.

    In 1956 Jensen returned to London, and freelanced for a wide range of publications including Weekend, Lilliput, Daily Express, Daily Sketch, Sunday Dispatch, New Statesman, Books & Bookmen, High Life, and King. From March 1958 he spent a few months on the London Evening News, drawing a daily cartoon, and in 1961 became political cartoonist for the new Sunday Telegraph.

    From 1972 he was a regular contributor to Punch, and in 1973 he began contributing theatre cartoons to the Tatler, in a series that lasted until 1977, and social cartoons to the Spectator, working for that magazine until 1976. In 1979 he left the Sunday Telegraph, and began contributing a weekly strip to Now! magazine, continuing until it closed in 1981. In 1989 he began contributing cartoons and illustrations to the Sunday Correspondent, until its closure in 1990.

    Ambidextrous, Jensen was an admirer of Bateman, Ospovat, Peter Arno, Bert Thomas, Trier, Hiroshige, and Olaf Gulbransson, and preferred to watch his caricature subjects on video in addition to photographs. He worked on paper and drew twice publication size using a dip pen, brush and Kandahar ink. For colour work he used watercolour paper and Winsor & Newton watercolour and gouache paints.

    A director of the Cartoon Art Trust since 1988 and its Chairman from 1992 to 1993, he was one of the founder members of the British Cartoonists' Association in 1966 and its Chairman from 1995 to 2000. Jensen won the first ever Lifetime Achievement Award ("Grinny") at the 1st Nottingham Cartoon Festival in 2002. He also wrote occasional journalism, mostly on cartoonists and cartoons. Jensen died in 2018, at the age of 88.

    His work is represented in the galleries of numerous public collections, including the British Museum and the V&A; and the British Cartoon Archive, University of Kent (Canterbury).
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FREE DELIVERY

£0.00
£310.00
In Stock