Brian Robb Explained

Brian Robb
Birth Date:7 May 1913
Birth Place:Scarborough, North Yorkshire, England

Brian Robb (7 May 1913 – 1979) was a painter, illustrator, and cartoonist. He worked for Shell and London Transport, designing posters and advertisements, and as a cartoonist for Punch. During World War II, he served as a camouflage officer in the Western Desert. He taught at Chelsea College of Art before and after the war, before becoming head of illustration at the Royal College of Art.

Biography

Early life

Robb was educated at Malvern College. He studied at Chelsea School of Art from 1930, and at the Slade School of Fine Art from 1935.[1] [2]

During the 1930s he became known for his humorous cartoons published in Punch. He was a skilled illustrator, creating both pen-and-ink and watercolour illustrations for books such as The Adventures of Odd and Elsewhere. He was in demand for his ability to design posters for London Transport and advertisements for Shell, where he had worked for Jack Beddington.[1] [2]

In 1937 he married Barbara Anne, founder of the pressure group Aid for the Elderly in Government Institutions (AEGIS) and NHS policy campaigner.

After finishing his education at the Slade, he returned to Chelsea School of Art as a lecturer.[1]

Wartime camoufleur

The head of the Middle East Command Camouflage Directorate, Geoffrey Barkas, always short of skilled camouflage officers, heard that there was an artist working as a private soldier in the Sinai desert. He found Robb sitting, utterly bored, beside a searchlight with nothing to do. Barkas promptly had Robb posted to his own department at General Headquarters (GHQ) in Cairo. Once there, he was duly commissioned and trained to be a Camouflage Officer. Remarkably, the lassitude quickly vanished: he was soon doing all duties with energy, good humour and enthusiasm.[2]

Robb's ability was put to use in Operation Bertram, the large-scale camouflage and deception operation for the battle of El Alamein. Barkas put Tony Ayrton and Robb in charge of the enormous and complex task of camouflaging Eighth Army's preparations and movements on the genuine attack path in the north, near the coast road, while creating a complete dummy armoured division in the south, near El Munassib in the desert. The dummy stores dump in the south was codenamed "Brian" after Robb. The dump contained 700 false piles of stores, simulating everything from ammunition and petrol to food and engineering tools.[3] [4] [5] [6]

Artist and teacher

After the war, Robb returned to his lecturing job at the Chelsea School of Art, where he inspired a generation of artists such as the illustrator Quentin Blake.[7] [8] In 1963, he moved to become head of illustration at the Royal College of Art, taking over from Edward Ardizzone. He retired in 1978.[1]

Legacy

Quentin Blake wrote that "Robb's work had a humane, wry, almost teasing character that makes me wish he had set his hand to more children's books than he did. Brian Robb established illustration as a separate strand in the educational life of the college [Chelsea]."[9]

Works

Books illustrated by Robb
Paintings

Bibliography

Camouflage
Art

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Artist - Brian Robb . London Transport Museum . 2010 . 15 November 2012.
  2. Stroud, 2012. p181.
  3. Rankin, 2008. pp365-366.
  4. Barkas, 1952. pp186-212.
  5. Crowdy, 2008. pp178-181
  6. Stroud, 2012. p198.
  7. Web site: Brian Robb and Life Classes at Chelsea College of Art . Blake, Quentin . Web of Stories . 2012 . 15 November 2012.
  8. Web site: Brian Robb and getting a job teaching at Chelsea College of Art . Blake, Quentin . Web of Stories . 2012 . 15 November 2012.
  9. Web site: Times Educational Supplement . TES . The Next Generation . 15 November 2012 . Blake, Quentin .
  10. http://www.artfact.com/artist/robb-brian-lsiz4jdt37 ArtFact: Brian Robb