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Harper has published work in all major UK newspapers.<ref name="LH" /> He is a regular and longterm contributor to ''[[The Guardian]]'' newspaper.<ref name="Rural" /> Since 1996, he has supplied illustrations for the ''Country Diary'' section and between 1999 and 2002, he illustrated the ''Last Word'' column written by philosopher [[AC Grayling]].<ref name="GNM">{{cite news |last1=Staff |first1=Guardian |title=Clifford Harper |url=https://www.theguardian.com/gnm-archive/clifford-harper |accessdate=3 April 2020 |work=The Guardian |date=18 November 2013}}</ref>
Harper has published work in all major UK newspapers.<ref name="LH" /> He is a regular and longterm contributor to ''[[The Guardian]]'' newspaper.<ref name="Rural" /> Since 1996, he has supplied illustrations for the ''Country Diary'' section and between 1999 and 2002, he illustrated the ''Last Word'' column written by philosopher [[AC Grayling]].<ref name="GNM">{{cite news |last1=Staff |first1=Guardian |title=Clifford Harper |url=https://www.theguardian.com/gnm-archive/clifford-harper |accessdate=3 April 2020 |work=The Guardian |date=18 November 2013}}</ref>


In 1987 ''[[Anarchy, A Graphic Guide]]'', which Harper wrote and illustrated, was published by Camden Press:{{quote|text=Like all really good ideas, Anarchy is pretty simple when you get down to it - Human beings are at their very best when they are living free of authority, deciding things among themselves rather than being ordered about. That's what 'Anarchy' means - Without Government.}} This has become a definitive and popular introduction to the subject, combining a thorough and inclusive overview of anarchism with his distinctive illustration. England's principal radical illustrator, he had a strong association with Freedom Press from 1969 up to 2005 as well as many other anarchist groups, publications and individuals. Harper remains a "100% committed" and engaged anarchist activist, having been deeply involved with organising the UK's annual [[Anarchist Bookfair]], re-designing Freedom newspaper in 2005, producing books, pamphlets, posters, book covers, postcards and drawings for, and supporting, anarchists everywhere. His drawings have been used and reproduced by anarchists and others in nearly every country of the world. He has produced a book of anarchist postage stamps 'For after the Revolution' and created his own small publishing project [[Agraphia Press]]. He does a great deal of work for the Union movement in Britain and he began working for ''[[The Guardian]]'' in the early 1990s, his work appearing every week until he was sacked in 2014. His illustrations for ''The Guardian'''s ''[[Country Diary]]'' column were published as a book in 2003 by Agraphia Press. ''Graphic Anarchy'', an exhibition of his work, was held in 2003 at the Newsroom Gallery, London.<ref name="Rural" />
''Anarchy, A Graphic Guide'', which Harper wrote and illustrated, was published by Camden Press in 1987. It begins: "Like all really good ideas, Anarchy is pretty simple when you get down to it - Human beings are at their very best when they are living free of authority, deciding things among themselves rather than being ordered about. That's what 'Anarchy' means - 'Without Government'.<ref name="GG">{{cite book |last1=Harper |first1=Clifford |title=Anarchy: A graphic guide |date=1987 |publisher=Agraphia |location=London |page=vii |edition=1 |url=https://libcom.org/library/anarchy-graphic-guide-clifford-harper |accessdate=3 April 2020 |language=en}}</ref>
This has become a definitive and popular introduction to the subject, combining a thorough and inclusive overview of anarchism with his distinctive illustration. England's principal radical illustrator, he had a strong association with Freedom Press from 1969 up to 2005 as well as many other anarchist groups, publications and individuals. Harper remains a "100% committed" and engaged anarchist activist, having been deeply involved with organising the UK's annual [[Anarchist Bookfair]], re-designing Freedom newspaper in 2005, producing books, pamphlets, posters, book covers, postcards and drawings for, and supporting, anarchists everywhere. His drawings have been used and reproduced by anarchists and others in nearly every country of the world. He has produced a book of anarchist postage stamps 'For after the Revolution' and created his own small publishing project [[Agraphia Press]]. He does a great deal of work for the Union movement in Britain and he began working for ''[[The Guardian]]'' in the early 1990s, his work appearing every week until he was sacked in 2014. His illustrations for ''The Guardian'''s ''[[Country Diary]]'' column were published as a book in 2003 by Agraphia Press. ''Graphic Anarchy'', an exhibition of his work, was held in 2003 at the Newsroom Gallery, London.<ref name="Rural" />


He is currently writing and illustrating an entirely new version of his book Anarchy: A Graphic Guide. You can see some of the new drawings at www.facebook.com/AnarchyAGraphicGuide. Although in poor health, Harper continues to work as an illustrator. One of his drawings, 'Solidarity', was displayed on a giant screen in Cairo's Tahrir Square in 2011.
He is currently writing and illustrating an entirely new version of his book Anarchy: A Graphic Guide. You can see some of the new drawings at www.facebook.com/AnarchyAGraphicGuide. Although in poor health, Harper continues to work as an illustrator. One of his drawings, 'Solidarity', was displayed on a giant screen in Cairo's Tahrir Square in 2011.

Revision as of 13:28, 3 April 2020

Clifford Harper
Born (1949-07-13) 13 July 1949 (age 75)
Chiswick, West London, England, UK
Occupation(s)Illustrator, anarchist

Clifford Harper (born 13 July 1949 in Chiswick, West London) is a worker, illustrator, and militant anarchist. He is a long-term contributor to The Guardian newspaper and many other publications.

Personal life

Clifford Harper is a worker, illustrator and militant anarchist. He was born in Chiswick, West London – at that time within Middlesex – on 13 July 1949. His father was a postman and his mother a cook. Expelled from school at 13 and placed on two years probation at 14, he then worked in a series of "menial jobs" before "turning on, tuning in, and dropping out" in 1967.[1]

After living in a commune in Cumberland, he started a commune on Eel Pie Island in the River Thames near Richmond, Surrey, in 1969.[2] In 1971, he took part in the All London Squatters organization, squatting in Camden, North London, then Stepney Green, East London, and Camberwell in South East London, while being very active in anarchist circles. In 1974 he settled in Camberwell, where he has lived ever since. He has suffered from poor health for most of his adult life. After contracting tuberculosis in France in 1969, Harper was hospitalised for three months in 1971, leaving his lungs and heart badly damaged and leading to heart failure in 2002. In early 2006, he survived heart attacks, in 2008 was diagnosed as diabetic, further heart attacks followed. In 2017, he was diagnosed with cancer and underwent major surgery at Guy's Hospital in London, which was successful. In 2018 he fell and badly fractured his hip.

Illustrator

One of the series of Harper's 1970s 'Visions' posters, originally drawn for Undercurrents magazine.

From the early 1970s onwards, Harper became a prolific illustrator for many anarchist, radical, alternative and mainstream publications, organisations, groups and individuals.[3] He self-published his own Class War Comix and illustrated for among others Undercurrents magazine and books on Stuart Christie's Cienfuegos Press.[4]

His early drawing style was typically exemplified by the utopian 'Visions' series of posters, for the Undercurrents 1974 anthology Radical Technology. These were highly detailed and precise illustrations showing scenes of post-revolutionary self-sufficiency, autonomy and alternative technology in urban and rural settings, becoming almost de rigueur on the kitchen wall of any self-respecting radical's commune, squat or bedsit during the 1970s. Of these posters Harper writes:

Funnily enough they were particularly popular in Spain following the death of Franco and the liberalisation that followed that happy, but long overdue, event. I think the reason for their success is that although they are utopian images they depict an existence that is immediately approachable—all it would take is the seizing of a few empty buildings and the knocking down of a few meaningless walls...

Heavily influenced by George Grosz, Félix Vallotton, Fernand Léger, Eric Gill and in particular the narrative woodcuts of Frans Masereel, Harper's style evolved in the 1980s in a bolder, expressionist direction, with much of his later work resembling woodcut, although he mainly works in pen and ink, and watercolour.[5]

Harper has published work in all major UK newspapers.[1] He is a regular and longterm contributor to The Guardian newspaper.[3] Since 1996, he has supplied illustrations for the Country Diary section and between 1999 and 2002, he illustrated the Last Word column written by philosopher AC Grayling.[6]

Anarchy, A Graphic Guide, which Harper wrote and illustrated, was published by Camden Press in 1987. It begins: "Like all really good ideas, Anarchy is pretty simple when you get down to it - Human beings are at their very best when they are living free of authority, deciding things among themselves rather than being ordered about. That's what 'Anarchy' means - 'Without Government'.[7]

This has become a definitive and popular introduction to the subject, combining a thorough and inclusive overview of anarchism with his distinctive illustration. England's principal radical illustrator, he had a strong association with Freedom Press from 1969 up to 2005 as well as many other anarchist groups, publications and individuals. Harper remains a "100% committed" and engaged anarchist activist, having been deeply involved with organising the UK's annual Anarchist Bookfair, re-designing Freedom newspaper in 2005, producing books, pamphlets, posters, book covers, postcards and drawings for, and supporting, anarchists everywhere. His drawings have been used and reproduced by anarchists and others in nearly every country of the world. He has produced a book of anarchist postage stamps 'For after the Revolution' and created his own small publishing project Agraphia Press. He does a great deal of work for the Union movement in Britain and he began working for The Guardian in the early 1990s, his work appearing every week until he was sacked in 2014. His illustrations for The Guardian's Country Diary column were published as a book in 2003 by Agraphia Press. Graphic Anarchy, an exhibition of his work, was held in 2003 at the Newsroom Gallery, London.[3]

He is currently writing and illustrating an entirely new version of his book Anarchy: A Graphic Guide. You can see some of the new drawings at www.facebook.com/AnarchyAGraphicGuide. Although in poor health, Harper continues to work as an illustrator. One of his drawings, 'Solidarity', was displayed on a giant screen in Cairo's Tahrir Square in 2011.

In March 2020, a plaque made by Harper was unveiled in Plymouth, making tribute to the Tolpuddle Martyrs. In 1837, some of the martyrs returned to Dorset from Australia after being pardoned.[8]

Bibliography

  • Class War Comix - New Times (Epic, 1974 & Last Gasp, 1979)
  • Radical Technology - includes 6 'Visions' and other drawings by Clifford Harper (edited by Peter Harper, Godfrey Boyle and the editors of Undercurrents, Wildwood House, 1976)
  • The Education of Desire - The Anarchist Graphics of Clifford Harper (Annares Press, 1984)
  • Anarchy, A Graphic Guide to the History of Anarchism (Camden Press, 1987)
  • The Unknown Deserter - the Brief War of Private Aby Harris in Nine Drawings an A6 chapbook (Working Press, 1989)
  • An Alphabet an A6 chapbook (Working Press, 1989)
  • Anarchists: Thirty Six Picture Cards (Freedom Press,1994)
  • Prologemena to a Study of the Return of the Repressed in History (Rebel Press, 1994)
  • Visions of Poesy - an Anthology of Anarchist Poetry (co-edited with Dennis Gould and Jeff Cloves, Freedom Press, 1994)
  • Stamps: Anarchist Postage Stamps for after the Revolution (Rebel Press, 1997)
  • Philosopher Footballers: Sporting Heroes of Intellectual Distinction (Philosophy Football, 1997)
  • The Guardian Country Diary Drawings (Agraphia Press, 2003)
  • The Ballad of Robin Hood and the Deer (Agraphia Press, 2003)
  • The Ballad of Santo Caserio (Agraphia Press, 2003)
  • The City of Dreadful Night (Agraphia Press, 2003)

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Clifford Harper - Little Histories Illustrator". Little Histories. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  2. ^ Abrahams, Luke (17 November 2017). "Secret London: Why you should go and explore Eel Pie Island this weekend". Evening Standard. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  3. ^ a b c "Clifford Harper: Graphic anarchy". guardian.co.uk. 10 April 2003. Retrieved 27 May 2009.
  4. ^ "Illustrations by Clifford Harper - Archives Hub". Jisc. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  5. ^ "Clifford Harper (1949 - )". Henning Fine Art. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  6. ^ Staff, Guardian (18 November 2013). "Clifford Harper". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  7. ^ Harper, Clifford (1987). Anarchy: A graphic guide (1 ed.). London: Agraphia. p. vii. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  8. ^ Waddington, Sarah (12 March 2020). "New plaque to mark the arrival of the Tolpuddle Martyrs in Plymouth". Plymouth Herald. Retrieved 3 April 2020.
  • An article about Harper's art appears in the Anarchist publication Organise! here
  • Agraphia Clifford Harper's official website: redesigned with over 100 image slideshows.
  • Interview with Lasthours.org.uk
  • Drawings for the new Anarchy-A Graphic Guide can be seen at www.facebook.com/AnarchyAGraphicGuide