Will Dyson b. 1880 Alfredtown, Victoria, Alfredtown, Vic.

Also known as:
  • William Henry Dyson
  • Bill Dyson
  • Asa Dane
  • Emu
  • Artist (Printmaker) , (Painter) , (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
Important early 20th century political, Dyson was appointed an official war cartoonist in 1916. Working extensively both in Australia and overseas, Dyson was married to fellow artist Ruby Lindsay of the well-known artistic Lindsay family.
Name
Will Dyson
Also known as:
  • William Henry Dyson
  • Bill Dyson
  • Asa Dane
  • Emu
Birth date
3 September 1880
Birth place
Alfredtown, Victoria, Alfredtown, Vic.
Death date
21 January 1938
Death place
London, England, UK
Burial place
Hendon Park Cemetery, London, England, UK
Death note
\n\nBurialNote: Plot D10, Grave No. 24863
Gender
Male
Roles
  • Artist (Printmaker)
  • Artist (Painter)
  • Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
Residence
  • London, England, UK
  • Melbourne, Vic.
Other Occupation
  • Official Australian war artist, 1916
Active Period
  • 1897- 1938
Languages
  • English
Training
  • c.1928 under Cyril Dillon, Melbourne, Vic.
  • c.1925 under Clive Stephen, Melbourne, Vic.
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • Black and white artists

cartoonist, caricaturist illustrator and writer, was born in Alfredtown near Ballarat, Victoria on 3 September 1880, ninth of the 11 children of George Dyson and Jane, née Mayall (see ADB ), three of whom died in infancy. Self-taught as an artist, apart from some possible assistance from the Bulletin’s permanent Melbourne cartoonist Tom Durkin , who encouraged brother Ambrose Dyson , Will started contributing drawings to the Bulletin during his late teens. William Moore states: 'One day his [elder] brother Edward picked up one of his sketches, and sent it to the “Bulletin”; it was accepted by the Editor Archibald, who forwarded a cheque for three guineas.’ He certainly had cartoons accepted by the Adelaide Gadfly in 1897 and had work in that year’s inaugural exhibition of the NSW Society of Artists.

Initially, Will Dyson contributed to the Bulletin under the pseudonym 'Asa Dane’, including good art-nouveauish 'Spook School’ drawings such as McDougal’s Hell (illustration to poem about nagging wife in Hell) 3 February 1900; The Deliverer (illustrating a poem about plants by Ted Dyson) 21 April 1900; The Boer at Heaven’s Gate 11 August 1900 (for which he was to be paid three guineas: Joan Kerr papers). 'Asa Dane’ (verso W.H. Dyson, 64 St Vincent St, Albert Park [Vic]) also drew The Truth of the Matter… is the Missionary now eats up the [black crossed out] heathen (original ML), published – with the caption replaced by a crudely obvious verse – on 19 January 1901.

In 1903 Will Dyson (always known as Bill to family and friends) encouraged Lionel Lindsay, who had just become engaged to his sister Jean, to apply for the job of cartoonist at Sydney’s Evening News . Dyson was at that time besotted with the artist’s model, Rose Soady, a passion he shared with Norman Lindsay . After Rose chose Norman, Dyson went to Adelaide where he succeeded Ambrose as artist on the Adelaide Critic , for which he drew Australia’s first coloured caricatures (Moore, SAA ii, 122). Cartoons include Vic’s generosity (about fashionable lady Victoria syphoning Murray River water away from poor little boy South Australia, a continuing SA grievance) 5 October 1904 (ill. M. Anderson et al., When Australia Was A Woman , WAM 1998, cat. 62, probably coloured). Dyson did not stay long in Adelaide but spent the following years moving between Melbourne and Sydney depending on where he could find work. He drew most of the multi-coloured covers for the Clarion (1897-1909) and did other cartoons for it, including his first efforts in political cartooning in 1908. He contributed to the Native Companion and Lone Hand in 1907; the Mornington Peninsula Arts Centre holds The Poet , a charcoal and wash drawing done for the latter. Les Tanner commented, 'Did we ever produce by world standards an enduringly great cartoonist? The writer thinks so in Will Dyson.’( CAB , 1963, 47) Yet the most he was ever paid for a caricature in Australia was 10 shillings. Dyson was able to move between the cities as he had a home base with his family in Melbourne, and in Sydney could stay with his sister Jean and brother-in-law Lionel Lindsay. In Melbourne he was increasingly attracted to his young sister-in-law Ruby Lind (Lindsay), who was attempting to carve out an independent career as a black-and-white artist. She was however wary of his attempts at chivalry, and it was some years before he persuaded her to marry him.

In May 1909 he held an exhibition of his caricatures at Furlong’s Rooms in Bourke Street, Melbourne, before marrying Ruby at Creswick on 30 September . The couple left for London soon afterwards, accompanied by the bride’s brother Norman Lindsay, who used the journey as an excuse to leave his first family. When Norman was joined by Rose Soady in London, there was a bitter irrevocable quarrel, caused in part by Ruby’s refusal to know a person she regarded as socially undesirable and Will’s previous relationship with Rose. In addition Norman resented Will’s growing success as his cartoons and caricatures soon became the toast of London intelligensia while Norman could not get his drawings published.

Dyson got his break on the New Age . He also worked on the Weekly Despatch and World , but he became widely known in 1912-16 when he was cartoonist-in-chief on the new Labour newspaper – or 'Socialist rag’ – the Daily Herald . His drawings occupied its entire back page. As a lifelong socialist he inevitably drew the working-man as a young militant figure fighting 'Fat’ (Capitalism) – the latter a figure he created in Australia and gave (or lost) to the world, according to Jensen ('Curious’ p.42), but more likely took over from the Sydney Bulletin (see Sylvia Lawson, The Archibald Paradox ). He was in favour of literary and artistic freedom of expression generally. After initial repulsion he supported the suffrage movement – probably thanks to the influence of Ruby who drew cartoons for the militant Suffragette edited by Christobel Pankhurst – dramatising the death of Emily Davison at the 1914 Derby, for example, in The New Advocate , a skeleton wearing a sandwich board labelled 'Votes for Women’.

Cartoons sent out from England appeared in the Bulletin in 1914-15, e.g. Qualified , 24 November 1914, 11, on a British actress returning to England as a 'celebrated Australian actress’, and “The New Turpin” – a Will Dyson exhibition cartoon , 26 August 1915, 9. At the outbreak of war he exhibited cartoons at Leicester Galleries and published his 1914 anti-German Kultur Cartoons from the Daily Herald in book form (London, 1915). They appealed to a larger audience than any of his previous work. Although The Times reviewer found two of the illustrations, Honour is Satisfied and Circe (original sold by David Alexander in 1978), 'almost too horrible for public exhibition’ (Jensen, 'Curious’ p.48), all were successfully exhibited throughout Britain and later in Australia (AWM holds 3 originals, acq. 1984). A further collection, War Cartoons , followed in 1916.

In December 1916 Dyson was appointed an official Australian war artist and attached to the AIF (Australian Infantry Force) with the rank of lieutenant. On 31 December that year, his brother-in-law, Reg Lindsay, was killed in the second battle of the Somme. Dyson swiftly arranged for the other Lindsay brother, serving at the front, Daryl , to become his batman. He then mentored Daryl towards his own career as an artist. Will Dyson was twice wounded sketching Australian soldiers in action (at Messines, 1917 and Zonnebeke, Belgium). Approximately 232 Dyson drawings and lithographs are in the Australian War Memorial (AWM), all produced in the final 18 months of the war, including the originals for Australia at War (1918), a book of Dyson’s verse, prose and drawings. His prophetic cartoon deriding the Treaty of Versailles, The Tiger : “Curious! I seem to hear a child weeping” (with child labelled ’1940 class’), first published in London’s Daily Herald on 17 May 1919 and since widely reproduced, is perhaps the most famous of all images resulting from WWI, at least in the English-speaking world (original lost). At the end of the War Ruby died in the Influenza pandemic. Will wrote Poems in Memory of a Wife , which he published in 1919 and worked to ensure that her career as an artist was not forgotten.

In 1922 when the Daily Herald was taken over by the TUC, Dyson resigned. He then experimented with puppets and animated films until induced to return to Australia and cartooning by Keith (later Sir Keith) Murdoch, owner of the re-vamped Melbourne Punch . He arrived at Melbourne in 1925 with his teenage daughter Betty , also an artist. The cartoons Will drew for Melbourne Punch include: At The – Theatre : 'The Lady: “What sort of seat did you have?”/ The Misanthrope: “Best in the house – couldn’t hear a word!” (ill. Lindesay WWW , 116). When Melbourne Punch was incorporated into Table Talk , Dyson drew for it until it also folded, in 1930, eg. Traveller entertaining friends with travel talk c.1925, ink and pencil original (Vane Lindesay collection). He also contributed to the Melbourne Herald , gave lectures, drew caricatures of visiting celebrities, attended life classes conducted by Clive Stephen, painted, and held an exhibition of his work at the Melbourne Athenaeum Club. He and Jimmy Bancks were close friends.

In the late 1920s Dyson became interested in drypoint etching (taught by Cyril Dillon when he was working on the Herald , acc. Dow, 80). He did several outstanding series of etchings, eg. Our Psycho Analysts late 1920s, which includes Dr Freud: “Naughty! Naughty! Who’s been thinking pure thoughts again?” (Vane Lindsay collection, NGA) and Dr. Freud introduces a patient to her subconscious (AGNSW, NGA). Our Dealers notes the dominance of emigrant artists in Melbourne at the time in “Sorry Mr Smith, but we only handle artists whose names are difficult to pronounce” (NGA), while Our Immortals includes the drypoints Count Leo Tolstoy suspecting sensuality in the heavenly choir (AGNSW, acq. 1963, NGA) and Thomas Hardy in the fields of Aspodel finds evidence of canker (AGNSW, acq. 1963). Jensen ('Curious’ p.53) labels him at this time 'a Beerbohm with muscles’.

He returned to London via America c.1930, exhibiting a series of satirical drypoints, Our Moderns , in New York, St Louis and London to great acclaim, though one of the series, White Trash , caused some controversy. Many of his etchings were printed in the New York studio of Frank A. Nankivell , an Australian artist long resident there.

Back at London Dyson rejoined the Daily Herald , now a 'popular’ newspaper wary of offending advertisers. The National Trust (NSW) owns Noted economist explaining the moral beauties of high prices (to a poor woman and child), an ink Depression drawing evidently published there c.1930. Lonely and disillusioned with cartooning and society (states Jensen), he remained with the Herald until he died, on 21 January 1938, aged 58. He was buried in Hendon Park Cemetery, London (Plot D10, Grave No. 24863), where Ruby is also buried. His final cartoon was a reaction to the killing of 400 people in Barcelona in a fascist air raid during the Spanish Civil War. Drawn on the day of his death, it shows two vultures watching the distant aerial bombardment. The caption (pasted over Dyson’s original hand-written one and perhaps more heavy-handed than his would have been) is: Once WE were the most loathsome things that flew (original John Jensen collection, London).

Dyson is probably best known in Australia for his war drawings, his 50 illustrations to brother Edward’s Fact’ry 'Ands (1907) and his caricatures in the Bulletin and Lone Hand , but his work covers every genre of black-and-white-art, even the traditional Bulletin -style bushie joke: the AGNSW holds a brush, ink and pencil drawing of a threatening male cook wielding a club in a bush kitchen and saying: “Anyone else got anything to say after my cookin’?” According to the AGNSW catalogue, it was published in the Daily Herald , London, c.1935 (possible a reworking of an earlier theme). In 1927 the Athenaeum Gallery, Melbourne, held an exhibition of original Melbourne Punch drawings by Percy Leason (over 200 works) and Will Dyson (80 works), plus a few b/w caricatures by Len Reynolds and illustrations by Claire Scott (1924-25). Several Dyson cartoons and three Leasons were purchased from the exhibition for the NGV.

Vane Lindsay also owns the undated ink and watercolour original, Meeting of the Society for the Suppression of Bad Language in the Army . Bendigo Art Gallery held an exhibition of Dyson’s work in 1980 (curated by Doug Hall). In 1995 a collection containing some 300 of his cartoons was discovered by the Australian cartoonist and cartoon historian John Jensen in the London attic of Baroness Yves Chanteau (a daughter of Betty Dyson’s first husband and his second wife). Lots of Dyson caricatures of other artists were done for Society of Artists’ catalogue in 1907, e.g. Alice Muskett .

Writers:
Kerr, Joan
Mendelssohn, Joanna
Date written:
Last updated:
associate of
Tom Durkin
1853
Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
James Charles Bancks
1889
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Cyril Dillon
1880
Designer, Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Len Reynolds
1897
Artist (Painter), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
relative of
Norman Lindsay
1879
Artist
Brother-in-law
parent of
Betty Dyson
1911
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
sibling of
Edward Ambrose Dyson
1908
Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Frank Nankivell
1869
Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Painter), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
relative of
Lionel Lindsay
1874
Artist (Photographer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Painter)
Lindsay, Lionel: Brother-in-law. Lionel married Dyson's sister Jean in 1903 and later Dyson married Ruby Lindsay. / Dyson, Will: Brother-in-law
associate of
Ambrose Dyson
1876
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Lionel Lindsay
1874
Artist (Photographer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Les Tanner
1927
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Betty Dyson
1911
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
relative of
Sir Daryl Lindsay
1889
Artist (Painter), Artist (Draughtsman)
Lindsay, Daryl: Brother-in-law / Dyson, Will: Brother-in-law. Will Dyson married Ruby Lindsay and Lionel Lindsay married Jean Dyson
associate of
J. F. Archibald
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
child of
George Dyson
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
child of
née Mayall Jane Dyson
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Rose Soady
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Christobel Pankhurst
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Emily Davison
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Clive Stephen
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Vane Lindsay
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
relative of
Reg Lindsay
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Julian Howard Ashton
1877
Artist (Painter)
associate of
Julian Rossi Ashton
1851
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
George Frederick Henry Bell
1878
Artist (Draughtsman), Artist (Painter), Artist (Printmaker)
associate of
George Courtney Benson
1886
Artist (Industrial / Product Designer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
sibling of
Jess Blake
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Jess Blake
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
John Henry Chinner
1865
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
sibling of
Ambrose Dyson
1876
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
Also known as Bill
parent of
Betty Dyson
1911
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
relative of
Edward Ambrose Dyson
1908
Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Heinrich Egersdörfer
1853
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Harold Gye
1888
Artist (Industrial / Product Designer), Artist (Painter), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
John Jensen
1930
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Harry Julius
1885
Artist (Industrial / Product Designer), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
George Lambert
1873
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Percy Leason
1889
Artist (Draughtsman), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter), Artist (Industrial / Product Designer)
associate of
Frederick William Leist
1873
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Sir Daryl Lindsay
1889
Artist (Painter), Artist (Draughtsman)
associate of
Percy Lindsay
1870
Artist
associate of
Norman Lindsay
1879
Artist
spouse of
Ruby Lindsay
1887
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Ruby Lindsay
1887
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Hugh Edward Maclean
1875
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Hugh Raymond McCrae
1876
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Alan McLeod McCulloch
1907
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Alice Jane Muskett
1869
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Leon Pole
1871
Artist (Industrial / Product Designer), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Henry J. Recknall
Artist (Painter)
associate of
Claire Scott
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
David Henry Souter
1862
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Raymond Stewart Wenban
1893
Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Painter), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Henry John Weston
1874
Architect (Architect / Interior Architect / Landscape Architect), Artist (Painter), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Society of Artists
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
'Fat Man's Devotions'
406 x 338mm, pen and black ink over graphite on tan wove paper. Gift of Mr A de Sauty, acc. no. 1927.821
(600-700 original Daily Herald cartoons by Dyson)
(Centre for the Study of Cartoons and Caricature, University of Kent at Canterbury UK)
"Anyone else got anything to say after my cookin'?"
Date
1935
Joan Kerr observed that the 1935 attribution "seems extraordinarily anachronistic. (Was it being recycled?)". On verso is partial drawing - quite camp - of what appears to be a koala dressed as a Hollywood cowboy, complete with guns, hat and chaps - possibly related to the "Hollywood" series of drypoints of the early 1930s, which suggests the mid 1930s date of this particular cartoon is correct, although the theme suggests a much earlier gag revisited.
Our Moderns
Date
1930
A series of satirical drypoints
"Impure Literature!"
Date
1930
In Keeping it Dark or The Censor's Handbook by Bernard Causton and G. Gordon Young, London (NLA)
Man
Date
1929
The Talkies
Date
1929
Our Immortals: Thomas Hardy in the fields of Aspodel finds evidence of canker
Date
1928
Etching, possible series title: Literary Reflections.
Our Immortals: Count Leo Tolstoy suspecting sensuality in the heavenly choir
Date
1928
Etching, possible series title: Literary Reflections.
The Animal Act
Date
1927
Circe
Date
1914
Qualified
Date
1914
Vic's generosity
Date
1904
The Deliverer
Date
1900
McDougal's Hell
Date
1900

Satirical London : 300 years of irreverent images : The Art of Satire
1 April 2006- 3 September 2006
Exhibition ()
Museum of London, London, England, UK
Artists and cartoonists in black and white
1999
Exhibition ()
S. H. Ervin Gallery, National Trust of Australia (NSW), Sydney, NSW
"A Sort of Bird of Freedom": Will Dyson cartoons, caricatures, drawings and satirical prints, many from the recently discovered Chanteau Collection
1996
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Australian High Commission, The Centre for the Study of Cartoons and Caricature, the University of Kent at Canterbury and Kent County Council, England
Will Dyson: Cartoons, caricatures and prints 1880-1938
1980
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Bendigo Art Gallery, Bendigo, Vic.
Curated by Gallery Director Doug Hall.
Fifty Years of Australian Cartooning
11 September 1964- 19 September 1964
Exhibition ()
Blaxland Gallery, Sydney, New South Wales
1925
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Athenaeum Club, Melbourne, Vic.
1914
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Leicester Galleries, London, England, UK
Society of Artists exhibition
1907
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Sydney, NSW
The catalogue for this exhibition has a series of caricatures by Dyson of notable Australian artists, including his brothers-in-law Norman and Lionel Lindsay
Society of Artists annual exhibition
1897
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Sydney, NSW
Citations:
  • Brown, Anna, (c.1999), Joan Kerr Archive, (Place: National Library of Australia, Canberra, ACT)
  • Greenwall, Ryno; Carruthers, Jane (intro.), (1992), Artists & illustrators of the Anglo-Boer War, (Place: Vlaeberg, South Africa: Fernwood Press; Johannesburg, South Africa: Thorold's Africana Books [distributor])
  • Taylor, George, (1902), 'The Spirit of Caricature in the Commonwealth With incidental remarks on Australian "Black and White"', (Place: Commonwealth Annual 2 (1902-3), pp 31-42)
  • Rafty, Tony with Brodie Mack, (1964), Fifty Years of Australian Cartooning, (Place: Blaxland Gallery, Sydney, NSW, September)
  • Palmer, Vance, (1949), Will Dyson, (Place: Melbourne, Vic. : Meanjin 39, vol.8 no.4, (December?) pp 213-23)
  • O'Reilly, David, (2 July 1996), Acid inkwell archaeology, (Place: Sydney, NSW : Bulletin, pp 22-23)
  • Moore, William, (2 December 1907), Will Dyson, (Place: Native Companion, npp)
  • Marriott, Charles, (1919), Will Dyson's war drawings, (Place: Sydney, NSW : Art in Australia (series 1) number 6, Art in Australia Ltd., npp)
  • Dyson, Will, (1919), Poems in Memory of a Wife, (Place: London, England, UK)
  • McCulloch, Alan, (1981), Dyson Commemorative Centenary issue of Overland, (Place: Melbourne, Vic., December)
  • Lindesay, Vane, (1979), Will Dyson, (Place: Melbourne, Vic. : Overland, pp. 20-22)
  • Lindesay, Vane, (1962), Will Dyson, (Place: Melbourne, Vic. : Overland 24, pp. 29-33)
  • Bills, Mark, (2006), The Art of Satire, (Place: Museum of London, England, UK)
  • Kerr, Joan, (1999), Artists and Cartoonists in Black and White, (Place: National Trust S.H. Ervin Gallery, Sydney, NSW)
  • Jensen, John, (1996), A Sort of Bird of Freedom": Will Dyson cartoons, caricatures, drawings and satirical prints - many from the recently discovered Chanteau Collection, (Place: Australian High Commission, The Centre for the Study of Cartoons and Caricature, the University of Kent at Canterbury, and Kent County Council, UK)
  • Jensen, John, (1989), Australasian Cartoonists in Britain 1889-1988, (Place: London, England, UK)
  • Jensen, John, (1975), '"Curious! I seem to hear a child weeping!" Will Dyson (1880-1938)', (Place: In 'Politics in cartoon and caricature', special issue of 20th Century Studies 13/14, December, [Bann, S. and Thomas, G.M. (eds.)], pp. 36-55)
  • Hall, Doug, (1980), Will Dyson: Cartoons, caricatures and prints 1880-1938, (Place: Bendigo, Victoria: Bendigo Art Gallery & Australian Gallery Directors Council)
  • Bedford, Randolph (ed.), (c.1900), Lecture on Art (the Clarion)
  • F., F., (1908), Our rulers: Pictures by Will Dyson with writing accompaniment by F.F., (Place: Sydney, NSW : Lone Hand, volume 3, September, pp 495-506, and 620-628)
  • Dyson, Will, (1908), Poet, (Place: Sydney, NSW : Lone Hand, volume 3, June, p 142)
  • Dyson, Will, (1912), G.W. Lambert: a caricature, (Place: Sydney, NSW : Lone Hand, vol 11, June, p 138)
  • Dyson, Will, (1908), Bacchus Time: the 20th century, (Place: Sydney, NSW : Lone Hand, vol 2, January, pp 280-81)
  • Dyson, Edward (illustrated by Will Dyson), (1907), Fact'ry 'Ands
  • Dow, David M., (1947), Melbourne Savages: A History of the First Fifty Years of the Melbourne Savage Club, (Place: Melbourne, Vic.)
  • Dyson, Will (intro. by G.K. Chesterton), (1918), Australia at War: A winter record on the Somme and at Ypres during the campaigns of 1916 and 1917, (Place: Cecil Palmer & Hayward, London, England)
  • McMullan, Ross, (2006), Will Dyson: Australia's Radical Genius, (Place: Scribe, Melbourne, Vic.)
  • Dyson, Will, (1916), War Cartoons, (Place: London, England, UK)
  • Dyson, Will (intro. by H.G. Wells), (1915), Kultur Cartoons, (Place: Stanley Paul, London, England, UK)
  • Lawson, Sylvia, (1987), The Archibald Paradox, (Place: Rignwood, Vic.)
  • Tanner, Les, (1966), "What's happened to Black and White?: "for gorsake stop laughing, this is serious!", (Place: F. W. Cheshire, Melbourne, Vic. : 'The Bulletin Book: A Selection from the 1960's, pp 1-4)
  • Tanner, Les, (1963), 'Black and White Art in Australia', (Place: Sydney, NSW : Current Affairs Bulletin, vol 33, no. 3, 12-23, pp 33-47)
  • Moore, William, (1934), The Story of Australian Art, (Place: Angus and Robertson, 2 volumes (facsimile reprint, 1980), Sydney, NSW)
  • Anderson, M., et al., (1998), When Australia Was A Woman, (Place: WAM, cat. 62)
  • Lindesay, Vane, (1994), Drawing From Life
  • (1988), City of Ballarat Fine Art Gallery print-out, (Place: Ballarat Fine Art Gallery, Ballarat, Vic.)
  • Gooding, Janda, (1997), Art Gallery of Western Australia cartoon list, (Place: Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, WA, June)
  • Writer, Larry, Norman, Pete and Sheather, Michael, (9 December 1996), 'The Cartoon Connection', ('A cache of sketches by renowned Australian satirist Will Dyson is found in a London attic' by John Jensen, Dyson's biographer. Place: Who, pp 81-85)
See also:
  • 'His Outcast Friend', 1925, Melbourne Punch