Eric Ernest Jolliffe b. 1907 Portsmouth, England, UK

Also known as Eric Jolliffe
  • Artist (Painter) , (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
Prolific mid 20th century Sydney-based cartoonist and painter and the creator of "Witchetty's Tribe". Despite having a number of close friendships within the Indigenous communities of northern Australia, in 1980 the Federal Anti-Discrimination Board accused Jolliffe of racism in the way he portrayed Aboriginal people in his cartoons - a claim that was met with outrage amongst his peers.
Name
Eric Ernest Jolliffe
Also known as Eric Jolliffe
Birth date
1907
Birth place
Portsmouth, England, UK
Death date
November 2001
Death place
Central Coast, NSW
Gender
Male
Roles
  • Artist (Painter)
  • Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
Residence
  • c.1990- c.2001 Bateau Bay, Cenral Coast, NSW
  • c.1928- c.1989 Sydney, NSW
  • c.1920- c.1927 Qld and NSW
  • c.1914- c.1920 Balmain, Sydney, NSW
Other Occupation
  • Window cleaner
  • Shearing shed hand
  • Rabbit trapper
  • Camouflage artist
Arrival
  • 1911 (Perth, WA)
Active Period
  • 1930- 2001
Languages
  • English
Training
  • East Sydney Technical College, Sydney, NSW
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • Black and white artists

cartoonist and painter, was born in Portsmouth, England, the youngest boy in a family of 12 children. He came to Perth in 1911, aged four. Two years later the family moved to Sydney and settled in Balmain. They were very poor and moved frequently, 'just one step ahead of the landlord’, he once commented (Rae, 52). Eric left school at 14 and tried a variety of jobs before leaving home to explore Australia at the age of 16 [15 according to Stephens obit.]. He 'humped his bluey through Queensland and New South Wales and worked as a rabbit trapper and shearing shed hand’ (Blaikie, 102) at Cowra, Canowindra, Coonamble and Walgett [for six years according to Stephens]. Although Jolliffe’s heart was in the bush, he needed money to live so moved back to the city where he worked as a window cleaner during the day and attended art classes at East Sydney Technical College at night.

Pre-WWII he worked as a freelance cartoonist mainly drawing for the Bulletin, which bought his first drawing. After his mate Arthur Horner moved to Smith’s Weekly Jolliffe drew Old Andy for the Bulletin from 1930 to 1939 (the anthology Andy was published by Frank Johnson c.1940). Other freelance jobs were for the ABC Weekly (1939), Pix (1946) and the Sun newspaper (1966-70). In fact, his only full-time jobs in a lifetime of drawing cartoons were at Smith’s Weekly for a year or so (1944) and at the ABC Weekly for a few months.

Jolliffe was a camouflage artist with the RAAF during the War, travelling to Arnhem Land and the Kimberley, where he got to know a number of Indigenous people. He specialised in bush humour, both black and white, and was admired by both races. (Billy Palm Island is said to have described Jolliffe as his favourite cartoonist at the opening of the Tambo exhibition at the National Library of Australia in November 1997) His 'comic studies of Aborigines in the more or less raw and the Outback’ featured in the Sun-Herald and Pix (especially) for many years. He sketched everywhere he went. He first met Aborigines from Arnhem Land and the Kimberley while working in a camouflage office with the RAAF in the Northern Territory during the war. They inspired Witchetty’s Tribe , e.g. “I see Daughter’s got herself another beau” ('caveman’ Aborigine dragging female by the hair, original NLA). He also drew hundreds, possibly thousands, of white bushie jokes, many featuring Saltbush Bill, e.g. “Couldn’t imagine Christmas dinner without a bit o’ poultry, Ma”, Bulletin 1941 (Bill about to behead an emu). Douglas Stewart recollected that as 'an exponent of life in the outback’, he 'used to carry the most charming little flying possum in his pocket’ at the Bulletin office (Stewart, 36).

Jolliffe’s 'Saltbush Bill’, 'Witchetty’s Tribe’ and 'Sandy Blight’ cartoons in Pix were nationally renowned, e.g. Corroboree 3 February 1945, 16-17; Walkabout 31 March 1945, 16-17; Back o’ Beyond 26 May 1945, 16-17; Piccaninny Playtime 14 July 1945, 10-11; a double-page spread of 'Jolliffe Jollities’ 16 August 1947, 22-23, on what might happen 'if aboriginal tradition mingles with the influences of our Western civilisation’; The eternal “She” in the Never-never 11 October 1947, 12-13; As Jolliffe sees the Abo 24 July 1948, 12; With Jolliffe in Arnhem Land 30 October 1948, 14-17 (on the Smithsonian Institution-sponsored Arnhem Land expedition – [and/or 'with Bill Harney and Charles Mountford on a National Geographic expedition and with Professor A.P. Elkin, the anthropologist’, according to Stephens] including jokes about most of the individual members of the expedition confronting the Yirrkala people, e.g. the anthropologists). In many of his Aboriginal cartoons the joke depends on the incongruity of the Indigenous Australian’s two worlds, e.g. woman outside humpy smacking baby while husband with spear is saying, “ Now , where’s the exponent of child psychology?” 1955 (ill. Lindesay 1979, 277). His 'Saltbush Bill’ cartoons ran in Pix magazine for nearly 50 years from 1945 (Stephens).

Jolliffe was an immensely prolific artist. By 1983 he had published 130 anthologies of his cartoons and drawings, mainly from Pix , according to Rae, and they were still appearing in People (with which Pix merged, separated, then merged again) in 1997. Annual anthologies exist to 2001; his son-in-law, the cartoonist Ken Emerson , told Tony Stephens that Jolliffe published ’132 books of comics’ (obituary Sydney Morning Herald [ SMH ]). The first was Andy (Sydney: Frank Johnson, c.1940) of which the publisher noted, '“Andy” has become a national figure and the sales of this book of fun on the selection have been phenomenal’ (ad. in Lock anthology 1941). Others include Corroboree: Aboriginal Cartoon Fun (Sydney, 1946) – with poem 'The Artist’ (Albert Namatjira) by Norma L. Davis; Witchetty’s Tribe: Aboriginal cartoon fun no.13 (Rosebery NSW: Sungravure, n.d. [1950s?]) – cartoons from Pix , including a sputnik joke [presumably post October 1957], plus a centrepiece series of portrait heads); Witchetty’s Tribe: Aboriginal cartoon fun no.28 (Rosebery NSW: Sungravure, n.d. [1960s?]) – more cartoons from Pix , plus 45 sympathetic sketches of 'some of the 45 aboriginal dancers from Arnhem Land who recently delighted Sydney and Melbourne audiences with their corroboree dances’, organised by Stephen Haag of the Elizabethan Theatre Trust, plus Jolliffe’s description and sketch of a 'Pukamuni [ sic ] death dance’ on Melville Island. Later he published his own annuals, e.g. Jolliffe’s Outback Australia (E. Jolliffe: Dee Why NSW, 1979), which consisted of Saltbush Bill gags, plus articles on cedar getting on the Macleay River and on the koala, with a portrait of a pretty Aboriginal girl inside the back cover 'for framing’), and Jolliffe’s Outback 129: Saltbush Bill’s 50th Anniversary (Jolliffe Studios, 1994) celebrating 50 years since Bill’s first appearance in Pix as a weekly feature.

In 1980 the Federal Anti-Discrimination Board accused Jolliffe of racism in the way he portrayed Aboriginal people in his cartoons. A burst of publicity ensued, with Ken Slessor, Prof Elkin, Lenny Lower and Jolliffe’s cartoonist mates rallying to his defence (some of whom were presumably cited posthumously). Blaikie said that Jolliffe had, in fact, replaced the earlier offensive Smith’s Weekly moronic 'Jacky Jacky’ stereotype (notably those drawn by Stan Cross ) with athletic hunters with a sense of humour and women 'as beautiful as white models’. Letters and cartoons about the incident are reproduced in The Best of Witchetty’s Tribe by Jolliffe (Jolliffe Publications, Dee Why, 1980). Joan Kerr’s papers include a copy, also photocopies of newscuttings and letters about the incident from Jolliffe’s own files.

Perhaps partly in response to this public insult, Jolliffe won the Stanley Award for best single gag artist in 1985 and 1986. He had also won the Sydney Savage Club Cartoonist Award twice (in 1960 and 1961). He was a fellow of the Australian Institute of History and Art [details unknown] and was awarded the OAM for his services to art as a cartoonist and illustrator, states Stephens. Yet even though he continued to draw cartoons and produce annual anthologies, few contain Aboriginal subjects from the 1980s and there are almost no Aboriginal gags in the Mitchell Library’s collections [ML] of his original drawings.

At the age of 82, Jolliffe added watercolour painting to his repertoire. From then on he regularly exhibited views of outback Australia. He lived in a retirement unit at Bateau Bay (NSW) with his wife, May, whom he married c.1932, but still spent much time travelling in the Northern Territory visiting his many Aboriginal friends. May died in 1993 after 61 years of marriage and their daughter May (wife of Ken Emerson) died in 1997. The Australian Black and White Artists’ Club gave Jolliffe a 90th birthday celebration in Sydney in 1997. He attended both b/w exhibition openings at Sydney in 1999 with his friend John Clements. Eric Jolliffe died in November 2001, survived by Ken Emerson and granddaughter Jane Emerson. His funeral service was held at Ourimbah on the Central NSW Coast on Wednesday, 21 November 2001.

Images include Aboriginal rock painter, “Actually he’d rather do landscape like Namatjira, only he’s scared they might give him citizenship rights” original not located (see Kerr, Artists and Cartoonists ); Aborigine painting on a rockface to his critic, “What d’you mean, 'chocolate boxy’?”

Aboriginal being chased by croc, Bulletin original ('Saltbush Bill’ OR 'Sandy Blight’ collection?), published 1 July 1946 (ML Px*D438/38), showing sheep, cows and rabbits at the top of tree with a bushie saying to a male visitor, “It’s a sure sign of heavy rain” (in State Library of New South Wales Australians in Black & White, the most public art exhibition, 1999).

A small 1960s-70s group of Jolliffe’s Sandy Blight strips are in ML (Pic Acc 3088), donated by the SMH c.1979, while a number of outback cartoons are in the ML Bulletin collection.

Writers:
Kerr, Joan
Date written:
1996
Last updated:
2007
associate of
Arthur Wakefield Horner
1916
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
John Clements Wickham
1798
Artist (Draughtsman)
relative of
Ken Emerson
Artist (Screen Artist), Designer (Graphic Designer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
son-in-law
associate of
Kenneth Slessor
1901
Artist (Draughtsman)
associate of
Stan Cross
1888
Artist (Painter), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Franklin Johnson
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Ken Emerson
Artist (Screen Artist), Designer (Graphic Designer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Douglas Stewart
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
parent of
née Jolliffe May Emerson
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
grandparent of
Jane Emerson
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Bill Harney
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Charles Mountford
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Professor A. P. Elkin
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
spouse of
May Jolliffe
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Lock N. M. Sherlock
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Lennie Lower
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Billy Palm Island
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Lock
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Mollie Horseman
1911
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Percy Lindsay
1870
Artist
associate of
William Mitchell
1941
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Australian Black and White Artists Club
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
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
Recognitions
Order of Australia Medal
Award
Note: Medal
Citations:
  • Joliffe, Eric, (1980), The Best of Witchetty's Tribe by Jolliffe, (Place: Jolliffe Publications, Dee Why, NSW)
  • Joliffe, Eric, (1994), Jolliffe's Outback 129, Saltbush Bill's 50th Anniversary, (Place: Jolliffe Studios, NSW)
  • Joliffe, Eric, (1979), Jolliffe's Outback Australia, (Place: E. Jolliffe, Dee Why, NSW)
  • Joliffe, Eric, (c.1965), Witchetty's Tribe - Aboriginal cartoon fun no.28, (Place: Sungravure, Rosebery, NSW)
  • Joliffe, Eric, (c.1957), Witchetty's Tribe - Aboriginal cartoon fun no.13, (Place: Sungravure, Rosebery, NSW)
  • Joliffe, Eric, (1946), Corroboree - Aboriginal Cartoon Fun, (Place: 'The Artist' (Albert Namatjira) by Norma L. Davis], Sydney, NSW)
  • Joliffe, Eric, (c.1940), Andy, (Place: Frank Johnson, Sydney, NSW)
  • Judd, Craig, (1999), Australians in Black & White (the most public art), (Place: Mitchell Library, State Library of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW)
  • (1986), Australian Black and White Artists Club Book of Originals, (Place: Australian Black-and-White Artists Club/ AGNSW (178.1988.1-102), Sydney, NSW)
  • (1997), Jolliffe at 90, (News of ABWAC party held 1 March 1997 at the Bowlers' Club Place: Sydney, NSW: Inkspot 28, Spring, p.13)
  • Stewart, Heather, (1993), Jolliffe goes walkabout from Witchetty's Tribe, (Place: Sydney Morning Herald, Northern Herald, 03-25, p.11)
  • Stephens, Tony, (2001), This Life (obituary), (Place: Sydney Morning Herald, 11/24-25, p 44)
  • Shiell, Annette and Unger, Ingrid, (1994), Ace Biographical Portraits... 1930s-1990s, (Place: Monash University, National Centre for Australian Studies, Melbourne, Vic)
  • (1998), Bonzer - Australian comics 1900s-1990s, (Place: Shiell, Annette, ed., Elgua Media, Melbourne, Vic)
  • (1981), Grassby vs Jolliffe, (Place: Identity, Volume 4, Issue 2, Newfong, John, ed., January)
  • Lindesay, Vane, (1994), The inked-in image, a social and historical survey of Australian comic art, (Place: Hutchinson of Australia, Richmond, Vic, p.95)
  • Kerr, Joan, (1999), Artists and Cartoonists in Black and White, (Place: National Trust S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, NSW)
  • de Berg, Hazel, Oral History Tape, (Place: National Library of Australia, Canberra, ACT)