Beresford Egan

Beresford Egan (1905–1984) was a satirical draughtsman, painter, novelist, actor, costume designer and playwright.[1] He was born in London but raised from the age of five in South Africa, where he was educated. He returned to London in July 1926 after spending two years as a precocious sports cartoonist on the Rand Daily Mail in Johannesburg.

He quickly established himself in the artistic and literary atmosphere of London. He not only illustrated the works of other writers, but also his own novels. He wrote three plays, composed songs and undertook theatre criticism and caricatures. He acted in British movies including "Latin Quarter" and appeared in the dying days of British music hall as The Great Daleno. His art was highly influenced by Aubrey Beardsley and many of his illustrations were in an erotic vein.

Egan is remembered as the rare original British exponents of art déco. He was one of the most famous people of London's bohemian scene for nearly five decades. His career graph was phenomenal, beginning with The Sink of Solitude, the dazzling debut which was a satire on the banning of Radclyffe Hall's controversial novel The Well Of Loneliness (1928). That book marked the beginning of a prolific phase of around six years during which Egan created numerous illustrations and book covers for works of Aleister Crowley, Pierre Louÿs and Charles Baudelaire. Egan was also a writer, and wrote a couple of novels, which he embellished with his wonderful illustrations. He also made illustrations for the monographs made by his wife Catherine Bower Alcock.[2]

Following military service in WW II, he acted occasionally in films, including four for director Vernon Sewell.[1][3]

He died in London in 1984.[3]

Bibliography

Books/Pamphlets written ( wholly or in part) and illustrated/jacketed by Egan
  • The Sink of Solitude. Hermes Press, 1928.
  • Policeman of the Lord. Sophistocles Press, 1929.
  • Pollen. Denis Archer, 1933. (Re-issued with extra material by Side Real Press, 2013)
  • No Sense in Form. Denis Archer, 1933.
  • But the Sinners Triumph. Fortune Press, 1934.
  • Epitaph. Fortune Press, 1943.
  • Epilogue. Fortune Press, 1946.
  • Bun-Ho!. Floris Bakeries, 1959.
  • Storicards. Barrigan Press, 1960.
Books Illustrated by Beresford Egan - UK Editions
  • Fleurs Du Mal by Baudelaire, translated by C. Bower Alcock. Sophistocles Press and T. Werner Laurie, 1929.
  • Aphrodite by Pierre Louys. Fortune Press, 1929.
  • Cyprian Masques by Pierre Louys. Fortune Press, 1929.
  • De Sade by Brian de Shane [ C. Bower Alcock]. Fortune Press, 1929[30].
  • The Adventures of King Pausole by Pierre Louys. Fortune Press, 1930.
  • Income and Outcome by Nigel Balchin. Hamish Hamilton, 1936.
  • Pobottle Stories [ by Nigel Balchin]. High Duty Alloys, 1935-1937.
Books illustrated by Beresford Egan – US editions
  • Flowers of Evil. William Godwin, 1933 (pirate of the 1929 Fleurs Du Mal).
  • Flowers of Evil. Sylvan Press, 1947 (authorised edition of the 1929 Fleurs Du Mal).
  • Aphrodite. William Godwin, 1933 (pirate of the 1929 Fortune Press edition).
  • Cyprian Masques. William Godwin, 1933 (pirate of the 1929 Fortune Press edition).
  • The Adventures of King Pausole. William Godwin, 1933 (pirate of the 1929 Fortune Press edition).
Dust-jackets designed/decorated by Beresford Egan
  • Moonchild by Aleister Crowley. Mandrake Press, 1929.
  • ( reissued in paperback with front cover design only, Samuel Weiser, 1992 and 2002).
  • A Soviet Marriage by Paul Trent (Edward Platt). T. Werner Laurie, 1930.
  • Beast or Man by S.M'guire. Cecil Palmer, c.1930.
  • The House of Death by Leon Groc. Dennis Archer, 1931 (?).
  • This Modern Stuff by G. Abrahams. Denis Archer, 1933.
  • Murder in the Square by J. Smith. Denis Archer, c. 1933.
  • The Sultan's Skull by W. Smith. Archer, c1933.
Books/ booklets about Beresford Egan
Theatre Reviews and Caricatures by Beresford Egan
  • Courier magazine - July 1956 to January 1959
gollark: I'll be able to investigate when I'm home in about 40 minutes.
gollark: I don't know.
gollark: https://esolangs.org/wiki/WHY
gollark: All three.
gollark: Unless you turn up the optimization setting to ~30, at which point it makes quite fast code.

References

  1. McFarlane, Brian; Slide, Anthony (May 16, 2016). "The Encyclopedia of British Film: Fourth edition". Manchester University Press via Google Books.
  2. "Beresford Egan by Adrian Woodhouse". Tartarus Press. Archived from the original on 26 December 2013. Retrieved 15 March 2014.
  3. "Beresford Egan". BFI.


Beresford Egan on IMDb


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.