George Henry Evison | |
Birth Date: | 25 November 1871 |
Birth Place: | Bootle, Lancashire, England |
Death Place: | Harrow, England |
Other Names: | Signed as G . H. Evison or Henry Evison |
Occupation: | Artist and Book Illustrator |
Years Active: | 1890–1925 |
Known For: | Illustrating the Daily Mail's Sixpenny Novels |
George Henry Evison (25 November 18711928) was a Lancastrian artist and book illustrator who illustrated many cheaper books with his strong line drawings. He illustrated magazines with both line drawings and colour wash drawings.
Evison was born on 25 November 1871 in Bootle, Lancashire. He was the second child of William Flinn Evison (baptised 24 May 1831October 1872), a clerk for the Liverpool and America shipping trade, and Sarah Ellen Emson (born third quarter 1845), the daughter of a publican. His parents married on 28 May 1867 at St Simon's Parish in Liverpool. Evison's elder sister Lillie (c. 187025 December 1871) died shortly after he was born. Evison's father died the following year, before Evison's first birthday.
Evison began his career with a five-year apprenticeship to a lithographic artist in Liverpool, while attending evening classes at the Liverpool School of Art. Typically, apprenticeships began at 14 or 15, and Evison would have been fourteen in November 1885. He attended the Liverpool School of Art He was attending the school in September 1888 when he was awarded a small class prize (7s. 6d.) for attendance and success in exams.
However, at the end of his apprenticeship (c. 1890), he was not satisfied with lithography, and gave it up in favour of pen and ink. He studied pen and ink drawing full-time under John Finnie at the Liverpool School of Art, where he won a scholarship worth £60.
He had already begun to have some drawings accepted by Magazines like Pick-me-up or Judy and this success led to him coming to London and joining the Slade School where he worked for 12 months. His April 1900 profile in The Poster and his cover illustration for that month indicate that he had found acceptance in London.
Evison exhibited seven times at the Walker Gallery in Liverpool and four times at the Royal Academy. His pieces at the Royal Academy were story illustrations in at least two cases. At least one of his works shown at the Walker Gallery resulted in a sale, Tea-Time sold for £10 in 1894.
Initially Evison appears to have concentrated on magazine illustration. He contributed illustrations to a wide range of magazines including:
The Poster reported that by 1900 Evison had already worked for four of the Newnes publications and four of Pearson's publications as well as other magazines.
Evison was a regular illustrator for George Newnes' Wide World Magazine. He did approximately two dozen illustrations for From Job to Job Around the World by Alfred C. B. Fletcher in Wide World Magazine Volume 37, May–October 1916. The serial story covers the adventures of two young Americans who set out from San Francisco to travel around the world with only $10 between them.
Evison seems to have made a slow start at book illustration. It was only at the end of the first decade of the 20th century that he began to illustrate any significant number of books, and this grew to a flood with his illustrations of the Daily Mailsixpenny novels. The following list of books illustrated by Evison is far from complete. The principle sources are searches of the Jisc catalogue, Additional libraries are being added all the time, and the catalogue collates national, university, and research libraries. and the page about Evison on the Charles Pearce Project.
1 | George MacDonald | 1893 | A dish of orts: chiefly papers on the imagination, and on Shakspere [sic], Enlarged Edition | London, Sampson Low and Company | vi, 322 p., 8º | ||
2 | George Humphery | 1900 | The haunted room : a phantasmal phantasy | Sands & Co., London | 217 p., 7 pl., 8º | ||
3 | Eric Lisle | 1907 | Under Honour's Flag | London, Frederick Warne & Co | vi, 312 p., 8 illus., 8º | ||
4 | George MacDonald | 1908 | Guild Court | London, Edwin Dalton | iv, 331p, illus. | ||
5 | George MacDonald | 1908 | Stephen Archer | London, Edwin Dalton | 354 p., Illus. | ||
6 | Herbert Escott Inman | 1908 | The Mill-Lass of Idderleigh | London, Frederick Warne & Co | vi. 424 p., 8º | ||
7 | George MacDonald | 1908 | The vicar's daughter : an autobiographical story | London, Sampson Low and Company | vii,375p., 3pl. 8º | ||
8 | George Mac Donald | 1908 | Weighed and wanting | London, Edwin Dalton | iv, 379 p., fs., 8º | ||
9 | Stella. M. Düring | 1910 | Malicious Fortune | vi. 154 p., 8º | |||
10 | C. Ranger Gull | 1910 | Retribution | London, Amalgamated Press | vi. 150 p., 8º | ||
11 | May Wynne | 1911 | Phil’s Cousins | London, Blackie | |||
12 | Effie Adelaide Rowlands | 1911 | For Ever and a Day | London, Amalgamated Press | 136 p., 8º | ||
13 | Marie Connor Leighton and Robert Leighton | 1911 | In the Shadow of Guilt. A novel | London, Amalgamated Press | vi. 178 p., 8º | ||
14 | Effie Adelaide Rowlands | 1911 | Leila Vane's Burden | London, Amalgamated Press | 138 p., 8º | ||
15 | Stanley Portal Hyatt | 1911 | The Little Brown Brother | London, Amalgamated Press | vi. 142 p., 8º | ||
16 | William Le Queux | 1911 | Treasure of Israel | London, Amalgamated Press | 124 p., 8º | ||
17 | 1912 | The Port of Missing Men | London, Amalgamated Press | vi. 138 p., 8º | |||
18 | Maurice Drake | 1912 | The Salving of a Derelict | London, Amalgamated Press | vi. 112 p. | ||
19 | 1912 | The Second Generation | London, Amalgamated Press | vi. 158 p., 8º | |||
20 | Mary E. Mann | 1912 | The Sheep & the Goats | London, Amalgamated Press | vi. 136 p., 8º | ||
21 | Annie S. Swan | 1913 | The Farrants: a story of struggle and victory | London, Charles H. Kelly | 352 p., illus., 8º | ||
22 | Herbert Escott Inman | 1913 | Nancy Lee, Mill Lass | London, Frederick Warne | 416, 4pl., 8º | ||
23 | Herbert Strang | 1917 | Carry On! A Story of the Fight for Bagdad | London, Humphrey Milford, OUP | 277 p., 8º | ||
24 | John Lea | 1920 | Fights for Freedom – thrilling stories of heroic deeds in the Great War | Illus. | |||
25 | T. C. Bridges | 1920 | Martin Crusoe: a boy’s adventure on Wizard Island | London, George G. Harrap | Col fs., pl., 8º | ||
26 | Charles Dickens | 1920 | The Adventures of Oliver Twist [The Newberry Classics] | London, David McKay | Col fs., 4 b&w pl., 8º | ||
27 | George Forbes | 1920 | Adventures in Southern Seas : a tale of the sixteenth century | London, George G. Harrap & Co. | 251 p., 8º | ||
28 | T. C. Bridges | 1921 | The sky riders : a stirring tale of adventure round the world | London, George G. Harrap & Co. | 192 p., col fs., 4 b&w pl., 8º | ||
29 | T. C. Bridges | 1923 | Men of the Mist | London, George G. Harrap & Co. | 4 pl. | ||
30 | T. C. Bridges | 1926 | The Book of Discovery | London, George G. Harrap & Co. | Col fs., 4 b&w pl. | ||
31 | John G. Rowe | 1926 | The Island Mine: a tale of adventure in tropic seas | Col. fs. | |||
32 | 1927 | Rifle and Tomahawk: a stirring tale of the Te Kooti Rebellion | London, George G. Harrap | Col fs., 4 b&w pl. | |||
33 | Various | 1927 | The Lucky Boys’ Budget | London, Blackie & Son. | |||
34 | Mona Tracy | 1928 | Lawless Days: a tale of adventure in Old New Zealand and other South Seas | London, George Harrap & Co. | Col fs., illus. | ||
35 | R. J. McGregor | 1928 | The Secret Jungle | London, The Sheldon Press | 160 p., 8º | ||
36 | Herbert Strang (ed.) | 1934 | The Great Book for Boys | London, Humphrey Milford, OUP | |||
37 | T. C. Bridges | 1934 | Recent Heroes of Modern Adventure | London, George G. Harrap & Co. | Fs. | ||
38 | William M. Thayer | UD | From Log-Cabin to White House: Life of James A. Garfield | London, Epworth Press | Col fs., 4 b&w pl. | ||
39 | Wingrove Willson (ed.) | UD | The World of Sport and Adventure | London, Aldine Publishing | Illus. |
The following illustrations are not from the cheap editions which featured Evison's strong pen and ink drawings, but from a full-priced Christmas book. The book was Under Honour's Flag