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McCannon, DR., 2016.

The jobbing artist as ethnographer: Documenting 'lore'.

Output Type:Journal article
Publication:The Journal of Illustration
Publisher:Intellect
ISBN/ISSN:2052-0204
URL:www.intellectbooks.co.uk/journals/view-Journal,id=233
Volume/Issue:3 (1)
Pagination:pp. 107-128
Repository URL:e-space.mmu.ac.uk/618551

This article focuses on a set of scholarly books published during the period 1920-1960, written and illustrated by women who were also well-known artists and designers, which offer histories and taxonomies of
'popular' and 'folk' art. I would like to argue that their interest in popular and vernacular culture can be seen as a creative as well as scholarly engagement with the history of their own profession as 'jobbing artists' -
the phrase Barbara Jones used to describe her wide-ranging and pragmatic creative output. Jones was an illustrator of children's books, a mural painter, as well as a curator, writer and documenter of popular taste. Enid Marx was a printmaker, illustrator and creator of patterned textiles, notably for the London Underground, and a lifelong collector and connoisseur of English Popular and Traditional Art (1946). Dorothy Hartley was an illustrator, journalist, historian and scholar. They shared an interest in documenting rural crafts, the 'Lost Worlds'1 they represent, and the popular or 'folk' culture, which was translated into mass produced forms during the industrial revolution - 'the things that people make for themselves or that are manufactured in their taste'. The authors in question were effective communicators in several types of media, and worked as 'cultural agents' - whether creating contemporary visual culture or writing about the material culture of the past.