Wanda the War Girl - Kathleen O'Brien (1914 - 1991)

From Perth Sunday TImes 11th July 1943:

INTRODUCING "WANDA THE WAR GIRL "

Her admiration for the fine qualities of the Australian Service girls inspired Sydney artist Kathleen O'Brien to create "Wanda the War Girl." Miss O'Brien's weekly strip of Wanda's adventures will begin next week in "The Sunday Times."

"Few Australian artists have tried to give Australian service girls credit for the marvelous job they have been doing.'' Miss O'Brien says,

"The Australian service girl has got everything-daring, beauty wit, charm, and a fresh, open-air
outlook. "I am delighted that The Sunday Times' will bring her to the public."

Miss O'Brien was born 28 years ago in her grandfather's hotel in Mackay, Northern Queensland.
Since then she has traveled all over Australia with her parents while her father prospected for
gold, broke-in horses, and worked for years in the outback. Her mother, who models aboriginal subjects in clay and is an expert in hand-weaving, inspired her to become an artist.

Miss O'Brien first studied art at the Brisbane Technical College. She went to Sydney six years
ago to study for three years with the late J. S. ("Wattie") Watkins, great art teacher. She has never been abroad, but she can read and speak both French and Italian.

"Wanda is not a portrait of any real person, but she represents the spirit of Australian girls I know, who have done such wonderful work in uniform." says Miss O'Brien. "I first thought of Wanda when I was watching a march of service girls. I spent days and nights sketching girls before I was satisfied I had found a true type of real Australian girl."

The comics below are rare examples of full colour tabloid size Australian produced newspaper comics. In common with her contemporaries Moira Bertram and Stanley Pitt, O'Brien often used large bold figures and layouts breaking from the more traditional grids employed in comics of the time.

Brodie Mack and Peter Amos Publications

Above: Page from Rangers Comic #23 published by Fiction House, June 1945.

As well as collaborating on the first Australian comic reprinted in the US, Kazanda, New Zealand cartoonist Brodie Mack and Australian writer Archie E. Martin (under pseudonym Peter Amos) produced a series of publications published in Sydney combining Mack's drawings and Martin's prose.

Phantom Pants - A Fantasy in Silk - 28 pages of Illustrations by Brodie Mack and prose by Peter Amos. Published by Ballards Pty Ltd, Sydney 1938.

If It's Not A Rude Question, 32 pages, published by NSW Bookstall Company, Sydney in 1938.

Hooey! 38 pages, published by NSW Bookstall Company, Sydney 1944.

Australian Cartoonists Art Dump #2

Written and drawn by Paul Wheelahan, Panther Comics.

Paul Wheelahan's The Raven.

Maurice Bramley cover on Marc Brody No. 3

Royce Bradford cover for Marc Brody no. 1

Stanley Pitt cover for True Stories of Australian Crime No. 2

Phil Belbin cover for Australian publisher Gredown reprinting US comic The Fly. I suspect Belbin never got to see the actual comic his cover was going on.

Will Donald's The Brass Vulture

Doug Maxted's Real! Comics

Australian Cartoonists Art Dump #1

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New Zealand born artist Unk White cover for The Australian Woman's Mirror, July 17, 1957. Unk White produced some of Australia's first full page colour comics and illustration in 1930's newspapers.

From interior credit:

Our Cover - Artist Unk White has captured what is perhaps half the delight of a holiday - the planning of it. Most of us of course can only dream of that voyage overseas; though we may still look at travel folders. All can really plan a holiday.

Serial adventure strip The Spanish Sword from Australian Woman's Mirror featured above. Artist unknown.

Edith Alsop (1871 - 1958) original painting mounted on board. Alsop was initially active as a cartoonist/illustrator in the early twentieth century before moving into printmaking and fine arts. I'm not sure what this illustration was from, possibly unpublished. Found a couple weeks ago in a basket of old English annuals at a local market.

Two stunning pages in sequence from Will Donald comic Perilous Journey. Scans courtesy of Geoff Harrison.

Original illustration accompanying one off book of Persian poetry by Will Donald. Photo courtesy family of Will Donald.

Original painted art board by English Illustrator Walt Howarth (1928 - 2008). Howarth produced numerous annual covers and illustrations over a sixty year career. Example above from a UK reprint comic of Australian character The Phantom Ranger originally published in Australia by Frew.

Two covers for western digest size story magazines by prolific golden age comics maker Peter Chapman (1925 - 2016).

Australian reprint of US newspaper strip Scorchy Smith. Cover artist unknown.

Three painted Wally and the Major covers by Stan Cross.