Bill Papas Exhibit Opens at Maliotis Center on October 5
Bostonians will have a chance to judge for themselves when a retrospective of over 100 pieces of Papas' original artwork opens at the Maliotis Cultural Center in Brookline on October 5, 2003. Known worldwide in the sixties as the political cartoonist of London's Guardian, Punch Magazine and Sunday Times, Papas parleyed his tremendous artistic talent into cartoons and book illustrations that were pungent, succinct but never destructive. Frequently he went against the editorial line but his wise editor, Alistair Hethrington, never reined him in and it was rare for one of his cartoons not to be published. Papas left cartooning in 1972 (he returned to it briefly in 1992) and retired to the small Greek village his father had left in 1900.
In 1979 he was invited by the Jerusalem Foundation to spend three months at Mishkenot Sha’anim, their center for outstanding musicians, writers and artists. Inspired by the inhabitants of the Old City Papas produced People of Old Jerusalem, a coffee table book packed with his elegant watercolors and pen and ink sketches and with an accompanying text by his wife, Tessa. The book was published by Collins in 1980. For the book launching the watercolors were displayed in the Old City Museum near the Jaffa Gate. On the day of the opening Papas asked the curator if the people whom he had sketched had been invited. On learning they had not, he grabbed a handful of invitations and raced around the Old City. That night the Ethiopian monks and the Armenian nuns stood under their portraits, the Palestinian coffee maker made coffee for the dignitaries and the shoeshine boy shone shoes; all his subjects came. Teddy Kollek, the then Mayor of Jerusalem, was delighted. He felt it was an evening "the city came together."
The retrospective of his work at the Maliotis Cultural Center that opens on October 5th will cover the full spectrum of Papas' artistic career. It starts with early sketches done while sitting on street corners in Europe in the late forties, continues with early South African work while he was an artist/reporter for the Cape Times and follows his career as a cartoonist, illustrator and artist in London and Greece. A number of pen and ink works from his travels throughout Greece in the seventies are included as well as watercolors of USA, Italy, Japan and Jerusalem. For more information, contact Lee Tamis, 617-522-2800 |