Roy Rogers Adventure Annual #3 (Original)
Medium: Pen & Ink Wash on Acid-free Paper
Size: 6" x 7" (150mm x 190mm)
Date: 1958
Code: RawlingsRR03
This is the unique original Pen & Ink Wash by Leo Rawlings.
One of a series of original paintings used in the 1958 Roy Rogers Adventure Annual #2. A highly respected artist and illustrator Leo Rawlings expertly depicted Roy Rogers.
- Artist BiographyLeo Rawlings (born 16 May 1918; Birmingham, UK)
As a boy, Rawlings won a scholarship to the Central School of Art in Birmingham. Rawlings as a child suffered from a speech defect and a nervous sensitivity which affected his self-confidence. His mother dying a few years earlier also affected the young Rawlings deeply. All of which contributed to the boy achieving very little at the school. His father removed his son (now aged 13), from the school at the Headmaster's request.
The family re-located to Blackpool, where Rawlings began to attend evening art classes. By the time he was 17, he had passed many drawing and painting examinations and was running his own one-man business as a scenic and display artist. Rawlings joined the Blackpool T.A. and trained as a Gunner/Signaller with the137th Field Regiment R.A. His Regiment was posted overseas in September 1941, in support of the Singapore garrison. With the fast approaching Japanese forces bearing down on Singapore , Rawlings and his Regiment moved north to join other British forces fighting a rearguard action in trying to stem the Japanese advance. The British Army failed to prevent Japanese forces from capturing Singapore and Rawlings along with thousands of other troops were captured. It was during this time that Rawlings began to draw the scenes of war he witnessed. (The artist had a photographic memory and was able to draw scenes he witnessed at a later time). He was unofficially commissioned after his capture by Lieutenant General Sir Louis Heath to keep a visual record of the prisoners lives as a P.O.W.
It was during this period that he drew over a hundred eye-witness paintings of the prisoners daily lives. Many were drawn whilst he was ill in the prison jungle hospital. Completed drawings were hidden inside a stove-pipe which was buried under his bed. The penalty for taking photographs or keeping any other records was death by the Japanese.
After the P.O.W.'s were liberated in 1945, Rawlings returned home to Britain with his drawings. After several unsuccessful attempts to get his paintings exhibited, they were finally shown in 1946 with a large number of people attending. Thereafter, Rawlings exhibited his paintings and lectured about his wartime experiences. In 1964, the stress of re-living his P.O.W. experiences through his lectures was beginning to affect the artist. On his doctor's advice he sought to sell his collection, which was bought by the Imperial War Museum, which still hold them today. Rawlings died in 1984.
P.O.W. artist - 'The pictures and sketches he drew reveal the different styles he used, often changes imposed on him by the difficult nature of the materials he employed.' (From the Deputy Director of the Imperial War Museum forward notes, page ix). Some of the artwork is very detailed, whilst others are sketches. Rawlings had to make use of the materials to hand which included Chinese Indian ink, crushed sandstone, clays and vegetable juices. He also used his own hair to make paint brushes. Paper was initially provided by an army officer, General Heath, after that it was a case of using any paper that came into his possession.
Comic artist - Rawlings worked as a boys comic artist for D.C. Thomson, L. Miller and Sons Ltd, London (and probably other publishers as well). For The Victor and The Hornet comics, he drew many war strips including The Island of No Return, which was set in a World War Two Japanese P.O.W. camp. It is obvious in his artwork for the strip that he drew on his drawings and experiences of P.O.W. life. For the strips Rawlings used a style best suited to a boys comic, neat, clean and tidy, but not overly detailed as would be found in a painting.
Artwork that Rawlings did for L. Miller and Sons Ltd, London included working on one of Britain's first superheroes, Young Marvelman. I believe he also worked on Marvelman, who was Britain's very first superhero. You can read one of Young Marvelman's adventures drawn by Rawlings below. This adventure (and the front cover scan) is from Young Marvelman, Vol.2, no.121. The Young Marvelman story is copyright Marvel Characters Inc.
Marvel Comics are currently publishing the Marvelman and Young Marvelman adventures in chronological order, as collected books. My apologies for the state of some of the images below, my copy of the Young Marvelman comic the story came from, isn't in the best of condition.
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