George Sprod Explained

George Napier Sprod (16 September 1919 – April 2003) was an Australian cartoonist, for many years active in England, who signed his work "Sprod".

History

George was born in Adelaide to Thomas Napier Sprod (4 February 1884 – 9 August 1942) and his wife Isabelle Kathleen (née Knight) (7 April 1888 – 10 April 1991), members of the Cudmore family, prominent in Adelaide society. As a youth he and his sister Kathleen were frequent and respected contributors of poems and drawings to the Register News-Pictorial's "Sunbeams" pages and its successor, the Sunday Mail's "Sunshine Club".[1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] He attended Norwood High School then Urrbrae Agricultural High School, as his parents had expected him to embark on a life of agriculture, but he showed little aptitude for the profession.[8] He attended Art School[9] but may not have completed a year, as by 1939 he was in Sydney, having left home on a bicycle, which he abandoned at Hay to complete the journey by rail. Apart from sales of a few cartoons to Smith's Weekly, he did not achieve his artistic ambitions, failed as a photographer and was sacked after a week's work at the De La Salle Brothers school (perhaps De La Salle College Ashfield),[8] so he enlisted in the AIF as a gunner (giving his year of birth as 1918) with 2/15 Field Regiment, and sent overseas.

He was one of the many captured by the Japanese in the fall of Malaya[10] and spent the years 1942 to 1945 as a POW, conscripted to work on the Thai-Burma Railway and in Changi Prison, where he developed his artistic talents. A fellow prisoner was the great British cartoonist Ronald Searle; they, and others, contributed to a fortnightly camp magazine The Exile.

After the war he returned to Sydney, where he sold illustrated articles on his experiences to the Australian press, first to the Fairfax Sydney Morning Herald,[11] then to Frank Packer's Australian Women's Weekly.[12] where he secured a position,[13] contributing occasionally to its companion The Daily Telegraph. In 1949 he left for London, where he had work published by various magazines including the News Chronicle, but most importantly for Punch[14] [15] and was praised by Malcolm Muggeridge[16] For twenty years he was one of that magazine's most published artists. He left London around 1969 and returned to Sydney, settling in Sydney's Kings Cross, which at the time had a thriving community of artists.

Family

While in London he married Francine Humphries (née Dessant) on 22 July 1961. A son, Douglas Peter Sprod was born in 1962 (and lives in England); the couple separated sometime before 1968; she died in March 1982.[8]

George was survived by his sister Kathleen Carter and brothers John and Dan. David Sprod, a nephew, inherited and is the custodian of George Sprod's extensive personal collection of his own work and memorabilia.[8]

Publications

as illustrator

Sources

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Response to Contest—Another Soon. . . Adelaide . 12 November 1932 . 21 May 2013 . 1 Section: Children's Section . National Library of Australia.
  2. News: Written and Illustrated by George Sprod, Associate. . . Adelaide . 24 June 1933 . 21 May 2013 . 3 Supplement: SUNBEAMS . National Library of Australia.
  3. News: Fairy Sunshades. . . Adelaide . 8 July 1933 . 21 May 2013 . 2 Supplement: SUNBEAMS . National Library of Australia.
  4. News: Blue China Country. . . Adelaide . 15 July 1933 . 21 May 2013 . 3 Supplement: SUNBEAMS . National Library of Australia.
  5. News: Old Ship. . . Adelaide . 22 July 1933 . 21 May 2013 . 3 Supplement: SUNBEAMS . National Library of Australia.
  6. News: The Rain Goblins. . . Adelaide . 30 September 1933 . 21 May 2013 . 3 Supplement: SUNBEAMS . National Library of Australia.
  7. News: Princess Seaspray. . . Adelaide . 28 October 1933 . 21 May 2013 . 3 Supplement: SUNBEAMS . National Library of Australia.
  8. News: A funnier side of life, even in war . . 10 May 2003 . 21 May 2013 . 3 .
  9. News: Art School Students Present Plays. . . Adelaide . 31 October 1938 . 21 May 2013 . 20 . National Library of Australia.
  10. News: Private Casualty Advices. . . Adelaide . 27 August 1943 . 21 May 2013 . 5 . National Library of Australia.
  11. News: Japanese Danced with Rage. . . 3 November 1945 . 21 May 2013 . 9 . National Library of Australia.
  12. News: Cartoons of Life in Prison Camps . . 17 November 1945 . 21 May 2013 . 12 . National Library of Australia.
  13. News: Some of Our Staff . . 14 June 1947 . 21 May 2013 . 30 . National Library of Australia.
  14. News: London Calling . . Melbourne . 24 October 1950 . 21 May 2013 . 2 . National Library of Australia.
  15. Lindesay, Vane The inked-in Image, Hutchinson of Australia 1979
  16. News: "Punch" Isn't What It Was. . . 30 January 1954 . 21 May 2013 . 8 . National Library of Australia.
  17. News: Quaint name, quaint man. . . Melbourne . 8 December 1956 . 21 May 2013 . 20 . National Library of Australia.