Showing posts with label cartoon. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cartoon. Show all posts

Sunday, 6 November 2016

Armed with a Pen

Pic of a pen with 3 bullets either side, all pointing upwards

He gave no speeches. 

He fired no bullets. 

Armed with only a pen and pencil, he changed the outcome of the War.


The Dutch cartoonist Louis Raemaekers became world famous during the First World War. His influence had a profound effect on the perception and course of events. He said:

“I want people to know, to think, to see the war as it is.”

As I entered the Dutch centre I was struck by a contrast. Happy, brightly-coloured modern paintings of cupcakes lined the walls. One of Raemaekers stark drawings appeared larger than life ahead of me.

Danse macabre
A woman was dancing with a skeleton. One bony hand rested at her waist, the other held her hand up. The skeleton had his back to the room. He was all bone except for his dance shoes. The woman was flesh and blood. She wore a gown, a crown and her hair in pigtails. She gazed up into his eyes (or where they should have been). Maybe she still saw the man she once knew? She seemed weak and hunched. Her red eyes contrasted against red lipstick in the otherwise dark cartoon.

The image made me think of the generation of women left behind. I later discovered that my interpretation was wrong. The following words appeared under the cartoon:

The German Tango – “From East to West and West to East, I dance with thee.”

Raemaekers portrays Germany in the thrall of a medieval danse macabre. It is a dance to the death. Once begun, it cannot be stopped.

A quotation from Louis Raemaekers’ obituary in The Times also appeared on the screen:

“It has been said of Louis Raemaekers that he was the one private individual who exercised a real and great influence on the course of the 1914-18 War.

Louis Raemaekers stands conspicuous as the one man who, without any assistance of title or office, indubitably swayed the destinies of peoples.”
London, July 1956

Dutch Centre Talk
Who was this influential man now apparently forgotten? Ariane de Ranitz presented her research and book on Louis Raemaekers to the Dutch Centre’s audience. Two of the cartoonists' great-grandchildren were present to hear about their ancestor.

Upbringing
Louis Raemaekers was born and grew up in Roermond in the Netherlands. The city stands in the South-east of the Netherlands. Both Belgium and Germany are within ‘touching’ distance on either side. The young Louis regularly visited his German mother’s relatives over the border. He developed a strong sense of right and wrong.

Emotional Cartoons
His later cartoons scream outrage against the use of citizens as human shields. He lived in neutral Netherlands. Belgian refugees poured across the border describing massacres by German soldiers. Raemaekers drew with a deep sense of shock. Although nervous, he could not stay silent. While the national government remained neutral, he felt that an individual was free to hold a different opinion.

Raemaekers’ cartoons appeared in De Telegraaf. They were not small, hidden at the bottom of the page, inside or at the back. They were huge drawings dead centre on the front page of the broadsheet.

Dutch Neutrality
It seems remarkable today, as it did at the time, that the fiercest satire should come from a neutral rather than a Frenchman or Belgian against Germany. His work carried more weight worldwide because of Dutch neutrality. 

Ultimately, Raemaekers had to leave the Netherlands for Britain for his own safety and that of his family. The German Kaiser had put a bounty on his head. 

Britain to US
From Britain, he ridiculed the indecisiveness of the American President to intervene in the war. His involvement in Allied War propaganda spread in a variety of formats. Lloyd George persuaded Raemaekers to go to the US. There, thousands of American newspapers published his cartoons. He changed the tide of opinion.

Second World War
As early as 1933, Raemaekers again spotted and depicted the threat coming this time from Nazi Germany. He had to leave for the US shortly before the start of the Second World War. His drawings, papers and correspondence with leaders such as Churchill were sent on ahead to Stanford University.

Many nations covered Louis Raemaekers in honours. His native Netherlands took much longer to recognise the great achievements of his pen. His epitaph reads:

Here rests Louis Raemaekers, great warrior for truth and justice.



Links and references: 
Ariane de Ranitz: Louis Raemaekers (link includes the danse macabre cartoon described above)
The Dutch Centre


Karen Andrews is a
freelance French to 
English translator,
transcreator, 
copywriter and
editor. She also has 
background in
marketing and 
project management.



Email Karen for further information via karenanglicityen@gmail.com in French, German or English.

Sunday, 20 December 2015

Tintin at Christmas


Tintin is in London for Christmas.


Picture of Tintin and Snowy in foreground wiht teapot and teacup, man watching from window in background

Somerset House* has opened a window on one of the world’s best-known comic characters and his Belgian creator Hergé (Georges Remi). Belgium's Hergé Museum helped mount this fascinating exhibition with materials from its archives. A novel creative approach brings Tintin to life for visitors.

As soon as you walk into the exhibition, you are sucked into Hergé’s comic world. The walls are painted with his famous characters and scenes. The French-speaking world views comics as the 9th art.

Pic of Tintin paintings on gallery wall at Somerset House, London
Art gallery approach to the Tintin exhibition

Cartoons do not have the same status in the English-speaking world. The art gallery approach takes you by surprise. The characters are so ingrained into Belgian life that you find scenes depicted on the sides of buildings.

Hergé liked to use windows as story-telling devices. A porthole famously introduced Tintin to Captain Haddock. The exhibition recreates this feel by covering the windows with comic scenes (see  below).


Cartoon pic of Tintin covering window
Tintin at the window

I loved the clever use of the fireplace. Both Tintin and Snowy (Milou in French) are covered in soot.

Pic of fireplace used to comic effect in exhibition
A sooty Snowy (Milou) in the fireplace with Tintin alongside

As a linguist, it was great to find an exhibition in London with information in more than one language. British exhibitions are usually embarrassingly monolingual and often fail to cater for foreign visitors. A number of French-speaking visitors were present during my visit.

There are fascinating little insights and pictures scattered throughout the exhibition. I smiled at the comment from the young Hergé’s parents. They considered that their son was only well-behaved with a pencil in his hand.

An observation from Hergé reminds us of French novelist Gustave Flaubert’s “Madame Bovary, that’s me!”. While others might recreate his characters, only Hergé himself could give life to Tintin, Haddock, Calculus, etc. As Hergé said:

“They are my eyes, my senses, my lungs, my heart and soul”

Two scenes are particularly appropriate for this time of year. With them, Anglicity wishes all readers a Merry Christmas...

Pic of Tintin characters with Merry Christmas banner in French
Merry Christmas and long live the yeti!
Pic of Tintin characters with Happy New Year banner
Characters with New Year banner, Tintin with long live peace

... and a Happy New Year!


Somerset House* is a cultural centre in the heart of London. Its famous courtyard fountains have featured in films. You can still catch the Tintin exhibition there until 31st January 2016. Alternatively, you can visit the thought-provoking Big Bang Data exhibition until 28th February 2016. There is even ice skating there until 10th January 2016.