Bruce Leslie Petty b. 1929 Doncaster, Melbourne, Victoria

Also known as Bruce Petty
  • Artist (Printmaker) , (Sculptor) , (Screen Artist) , (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
  • Designer
Popular and prolific Melbourne, London and Sydney based newspaper cartoonist, film-maker, animator, sculptor and etcher
Name
Bruce Leslie Petty
Also known as Bruce Petty
Birth date
1929
Birth place
Doncaster, Melbourne, Victoria
Gender
Male
Roles
  • Artist (Printmaker)
  • Artist (Sculptor)
  • Artist (Screen Artist)
  • Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
  • Designer
Residence
  • c.1961- c.2006 Sydney, New South Wales
  • c.1960- c.1961 New York, NY, USA
  • c.1954- c.1960 London, England, UK
  • c.1929- c.1954 Doncaster, Melbourne, Victoria
  • c.1929- c.1954 Melbourne, Victoria
Active Period
  • c.1950- c.2006
Languages
  • English
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • Black and white artists

Cartoonist, film-maker, animator, sculptor and etcher, claims to have been born and raised on an orchard in Doncaster, Victoria, on the outskirts of Melbourne. He drew for MonashUniversity’s student newspaper Lot’s Wife and worked for the Melbourne Herald before travelling to Europe, Asia and North America in 1953. He reached London in 1954 and worked in England for six years, including a stint on Punch under Malcolm Muggeridge. His comments on London are cited in Jensen (p.10). He also lived and worked in the USA and had cartoons published in the New Yorker . The original of a cartoon published 22 November 1969 showing a Spanish dancer in a New York apartment (artist’s collection) was included in Joan Kerr and Jo Holder’s 1999 S.H. Ervin Gallery exhibition, Artists in Black and White . Back home in 1960, Petty offered work to the Bulletin , including roughs rejected by the New Yorker ; they were preferred to his more finished work (Rolfe, p.271). Draws on paper with a pentel pen (Foyle, 95) and increasingly directly onto the computer.

Petty joined the Sydney Daily Mirror as its political cartoonist in 1961, then transferred to the Australian in 1964 (e.g. 1964 cartoon ill. King, 174; NLA original(?), 'What’s the common fee for treatment of fainting on seeing the hospital bill’ 1 March 1970). Then followed the Melbourne Age in 1976, where he remains. Three 1970s originals, including one c.1972, are at ML PXD 764. The S.H. Ervin exhibition (cats 139-42) included: '“We must avoid a monopoly situation!”/ “Yes – Let’s ring Rupert!”’ published Age January 1989; Stop laughing this is serious – a parody of Stan Cross 's famous cartoon with 'Unions’ clinging to 'Keating’ – Age 15 April 1989; The Muse Machine published Age 24 February 1990; and One day, son, all yours could be this , published Age 8 September 1990 – all from Petty’s own collection.

Dinah & Michael Dysart own the original of 'Thank goodness they’re elected, now we won’t have to go to any more art exhibitions’ (but Dinah couldn’t locate it in 1999). 'I think you’ve cut something important’ [on ABC cuts] and 'Fade away’ [on Pauline Hanson], both published in the Age in April 1997, and 'Things take time to go through the system’ of July 1997, were exhibited in Bringing the House Down: 12 Months of Australian Political Humour (Canberra: National Museum of Australia/ Old Parliament House exhibition, 1997), cats 27, 49, 77. His cartoon on the economy won best cartoon in the 1998 Bringing the House Down show in which he continues to exhibit, including 2 cartoons in the 2001 show.

Petty has contributed to very many papers, magazines, posters etc, including Time Magazine (Australia) and the Australian as well as working in animation, sculpture and etchings. His cartoons include a print about TV flowers looking so real that a viewer yells 'FAKE!’ at the real ones heading The Broadsheet 3: Where are all the flowers going (poster containing 3 individual prints by three artists and 6 poems on one sheet, 1968 NGA) and Overland 1969 (ill. Lindesay 1979, 315); also no 41, Winter 1969, pp. 12 & 23, two cartoons also critical of television; cover no. 35 (Summer 1966-7), Labor Party issue; no.26 (April 1963, 33) “Let’s see now… one for the town hall, one for the railway station, one for the cement works, one for…” (a military general pointing to rocket launchers); more in file. He has published several books of cartoons, made posters (e.g. the official Adelaide Festival of Arts poster 1976), animated films – Leisure won an Oscar in 1977 – and digital TV animated films. Petty and Henry Smith’s multi-media The Law Machine was shown at Parliament House in 1997. An exhibition of his etching was at the Australian Archives,Canberra, in 2002.

Petty was married to Julie Rigg (ABC Arts National Film critic) for years and they had 2 sons; he has at least one son by his second wife.

Under a good self-portrait on an article on contemporary cartoonists in the Australian (1-7 April 1999), Petty of the Age stated:

The aim is to be alarming, funny and correct at the same time. Of course, it’s pretty hard to alarm now we are globally connected to the world’s maddest events. We draw the politicians, but these days the politicians have largely given up on old ideas like equity, redistribution of wealth and service. They do sell-offs and safety nets. Governments will always get it wrong, they are trying to please people who generate wealth and people who haven’t got any. We draw them getting it wrong.

The panel says:

The artist: “Fresh, challenging and equally unfair to everyone.”

The politician: “Not so much a cartoonist as a national psychotherapist.”

Examples: The Penguin Petty includes a cartoon of archaeologists finding Venus de Milo’s arms and a strip about woman not wearing a bra and her husband not wearing underpants because of Women’s Lib (she doesn’t wash underpants). The few originals in SLNSW include a rather dull drawing (V*/CART/35) for the SLNSW Open Week Poster 1980 (copy of poster also in collection), and The Floor of Filth showing a couple running for an ark labelled 'Victoria’ to shelter from a tiny black cloud labelled 'Portnoy’s Complaint’ in the sky, n.d. (DG A57, f.11: in SLNSW 1999 b/w show curated by Joan Kerr, Craig Judd and Jo Holder).

Writers:
Kerr, Joan
staffcontributor
Date written:
2012
Last updated:
2012
associate of
Australian Enlarging and Portrait Paintings Co.
Artist (Photographer), Artist (Painter)
spouse of
Julie Rigg
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
parent of
Sam Petty
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Henry Smith
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Malcolm Muggeridge
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Lindsay Foyle
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Arthur Wakefield Horner
1916
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
John Henry Spooner
1946
Artist (Painter), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Ron Tandberg
1943
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Les Tanner
1927
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Cathy Wilcox
1963
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Punch
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Melbourne Herald
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Lot's Wife (Monash University)
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
New Yorker
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Daily Mirror
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Time Magazine (Australia)
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
Cartoons 2004: Behind the lines: The year's best cartoons
2005
Exhibition ()
National Museum of Australia, Canberra, ACT
[exhibition of Bruce Petty etchings]
2002
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Australian Archives, Canberra, ACT
Bringing the House Down
2001
Exhibition ()
National Museum of Australia/ Old Parliament House, Canberra, ACT
Australians in black & white : (the most public art)
1999
Exhibition ()
State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW
Artists and cartoonists in black and white
1999
Exhibition ()
S. H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust of Australia (NSW), Sydney, NSW
Bringing the House Down
1998
Exhibition ()
National Museum of Australia / Old Parliament House, Canberra
Bringing the House Down : 12 Months of Australian Political Humour
1997
Exhibition ()
National Museum of Australia / Old Parliament House, Canberra, ACT
Fifty Years of Australian Cartooning
11 September 1964- 19 September 1964
Exhibition ()
Blaxland Gallery, Sydney, New South Wales
Recognitions
Academy Award, (Oscar TM)
1977
Award
Best animated short
Citations:
  • (2005), Best Australian political cartoons 2005, (Place: Radcliffe, Russ, ed, Scribe, Melbourne, Vic)
  • (2004), Best Australian political cartoons 2004, (Place: Radcliffe, Russ, ed., Scribe, Melbourne, Vic)
  • Petty, Bruce, (1983), Petty's Money Book, (Place: Dominion Press, Vic)
  • Petty, Bruce, (1972), The Penguin Petty, (Place: Penguin)
  • (2003), Best Australian political cartoons 2003, (Place: Radcliffe, Russ, ed., Scribe, Melbourne, Vic)
  • Petty, Bruce, (1968), The Best of Petty, (Place: Horwitz, Sydney, NSW)
  • Petty, Bruce, (1967), Petty's Australia Fair, (Place: F.W. Cheshire (reprinted as Bruce Petty, Petty's Australia - And How It Works, Penguin 1976), Melbourne, Vic)
  • McCulloch, Alan, (1984), Encyclopedia of Australian art, (Place: Hutchinson of Australia (2nd revised edition), Melbourne, Vic)
  • King, Jonathan, (1979), The other side of the coin - a cartoon history of Australia, (Place: Cassell Australia (Revised edition), Stanmore, NSW)
  • Judd, Craig, (1999), Australians in black & white (the most public art), (Place: State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW)
  • Kerr, Joan, (1999), Artists and Cartoonists in Black and White, (Place: National Trust S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, NSW)
  • Jensen, John, (1989), Australasian Cartoonists in Britain 1889-1988, (Place: Sir Robert Menzies Centre for Australian Studies, London, England, UK, page 10)
  • (1967), Gough Syrup, (Place: Walsh, Richard, ed, Sun, Melbourne, Vic)
  • Foyle, Lindsay, (1988), Cartoonists of 1988, (Place: Bulletin, November, 15, Sydney, NSW, page 95)
  • Adams, Phillip, (1986), Arrest that Cartoonist!, (Place: Penguin, Ringwood, Vic)
  • Hansen, Guy, (2005), [Cartoons 2004] Behind the lines - The year's best cartoons, (Place: National Museum of Australia, Canberra, ACT)
  • Turner, Ann, Oral History interviews, (Place: National Library of Australia, Canberra, ACT)
  • Turner, Ann, Oral History interviews, (Place: National Library of Australia, Canberra, ACT)
  • (1986), Australian Black and White Artists Club book of originals, (Place: Australian Black and White Artists Club (Art Gallery of New South Wales, 178.1988.1-102), Sydney, NSW)
  • (18 March 1989), Bruce Petty: The thinking person's sketch symbol, (Place: Sydney Morning Herald, Good Weekend, pages 70-76, Sydney, NSW)
  • (1966), No Holts Barred, (Place: Walsh, Richard, ed, Sun (36 cartoons from the Australian 1965-66), Melbourne, Vic)
  • (2000), In Their Image, (Place: Turner, Ann, ed, National Library of Australia, Canberra, ACT)
  • Smith, Robert, (1973), The imagery of Bruce Petty, (Place: Art and Australia, Volume 10, Number 4, April, Sydney, NSW, pages 372 ff)
  • (1991), Labor in cartoons - cartoons of the Australian Labor Party in Victoria 1891-1990, (Place: Senyard, June, ed., Hyland House, South Yarra, Vic)
  • Rolfe, Patricia, (1979), The journalistic javelin - an illustrated history of the Bulletin, (Place: Wildcat Press, Sydney, NSW (distributed by Golden Press, Gladesville, NSW), page 271)
  • Rafty, Tony / Mack, Brodie, (1964), Fifty Years of Australian Cartooning, (Place: Blaxland Gallery, Sydney, NSW)
  • Petty, Bruce, (1997), The Absurd Machine, (Place: Penguin, Ringwood, Vic)
See also:
  • 'Report Card', Weekend Australian (Media) 1-7 April, 1999, 6 (6 self portraits with a comment by each cartoonist himself (sic), an artist and a politician (anon).
  • Self portrait Overland 67 (1977), page 66
  • Self-portrait chained to drafting stand (King, 8)
  • (Self?) portrait (ill. King, 185)
  • Petty, self-portrait cartoon on front page of the Age (Melbourne), 9 June 1976, among other men (Nicholson, Tandberg, Spooner and Tanner) as 'Australia's finest gallery of cartoonists'
  • Powerhouse Museum, Medibank poster, Powerhouse Museum, Sydney, NSW http://from.ph/319724