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Jennetta Vise

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Jennetta Vise
BornMarjory Jeannetta Blythe Vise
(1912-09-09)9 September 1912
Chichester, England
Died26 October 1979(1979-10-26) (aged 67)
OccupationIllustrator
Alma materEcole des Beaux-Arts
The Sorbonne
ParentsToye Vise

Jennetta Vise FSZ[1] (9 September 1912 – 26 October 1979) was an English book, comic and magazine illustrator. Her work appeared in publications such as Mary Grannan's Just Mary series,[2] Robin annuals and many publications for the Girl Guides Association.

Personal life

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Marjory Jeannetta Blythe Vise was born in Chichester to father Reginald Toye Vise, a journalist, and mother Ethel Maude (née Badrick). She had an older sister, Barbara, who became assistant editor at Modern Woman magazine.[3] Vise studied at L’Ecole des Beaux Arts and the Sorbonne.[4] She lived in London until 1975 and was a member of The Women's Press Club.[5] She died at home in Sussex.

Illustrator

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At the age of 18 Vise illustrated an article by her father, about which Tatler commented that people would “appreciate the skill of the two artists responsible for this joint word and pencil picture, which has quite a butterfly-like touch.”[6] She was represented by Grestock and Marsh, London.[7]

Girl Guides

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After “being discovered” by Margaret Playle, the general editor for the Girl Guide Association (GGA),[8] Vise illustrated the following publications:

  • The Big Test: The Story of the Girl Guides in the World War by Christian Catherine (1947)
  • The Girl Guide Annual by Girl Guides Association (1951)
  • The Brownie Pack: A Handbook for Brownie Guiders by Ailsa Brambleby (1956)
  • The True Book about Girl Guides by Alix Liddell (1956)
  • Trefoil Tales by Alix Liddell, Vera Armstrong and Elizabeth Hill (1957)[9]
  • The Brownies’ Annual by Girl Guides Association (1959, 1962, 1963)
  • The Golden Bar Book of Brownie Stories by Robert Moss (1961)
  • Three for Trouble by Ailsa Brambleby (1963)
  • Three for Pack Holiday by Ailsa Brambleby (1964)
  • The Brownie Book by Girl Guides Association New Zealand (1965)
  • The Brownie Book, by Ailsa Brambleby (1965)
  • The Brownie Guide Handbook by Ailsa Brambleby (1968)
  • Musical Fun with the Brownie Pack by Hettie Smith (1976)

Other selected publications

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  • Out of Town by A. A. Thomson (1935)[10]
  • What About a Family? by Lou Chaloner (1944)[11]
  • The Noddles Again by Madeleine Collier (1944)[12]
  • London Lover by Trevor Allen (1948)[13]
  • Savoyard Scrapbook by W S Gilbert for the D’Oyly Carte Opera Company (1948)[14]
  • Fables for Children by Irene Pearl (1948)[15]
  • Christina’s Fairy Book by Ford Madox Ford (1949)[16]
  • The Purple Muffin the Mule Book by Annette Mills (1953)[17]
  • The Scottish Pupil’s Spelling Book (1955)[18]
  • The Helpful Giant by Eileen Arthurton (1957)[19]
  • Fluent French Comedies by Charles S Elston (1958)[20]
  • Just Mary Stories by Mary Grannan (1958)[21]
  • More Just Mary Stories by Mary Grannan (1959)
  • Better Spoken English by Geoffrey Barnard (1959)[22]
  • Wild Rose of the King’s Chase by Hilda Moss (1960)[23]
  • Gay Way Picture Dictionary (1961)[24]
  • Measuring is Fun by Frederick J Vickery (1961)[25]
  • The Story of Porky Peek by Elizabeth Maitland (1963)[26]
  • The Little Red Bus; The New Bed; No Hat! and Plum Pie by Miss Read (1964)[27]
  • Cluck, the Little Black Hen; Hob and The Horse-Bat by Miss Read (1965)[28]
  • The Old Shoe House by Ella Ruth Boyce (1966)[29]
  • Soucoupes Volantes!! by R N Allan (1966)[30]

Magazines

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Other work

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In 1935 she decorated a miniature rocking horse that was presented to British circus owner Bertram Mills by the Royal Veterinary College in recognition of his service to animals.[36]

References

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  1. ^ Grenville, Kenneth (1950). The Story of Peter Otter and Me. London: Charles Letts and Company.
  2. ^ Hume, Margaret (2006). Just Mary: The life of Mary Evelyn Grannan. Toronto: Dundurn. p. 333. ISBN 155002597X.
  3. ^ Forster, Laurel (2020). Women's Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. p. 237. ISBN 978-1474470001.
  4. ^ "Death of a dear friend to the Association". Guider. London: Girl Guides Association. December 1979. p. 539.
  5. ^ Forster, Laurel (2020). Women's Periodicals and Print Culture in Britain. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. p. 237. ISBN 978-1474470001.
  6. ^ "Notes from here and there". The Tatler (Vol. CXVII No. 1517 ed.). London, UK: Conde Nast Publishing Co. July 1930. p. xviii.
  7. ^ "What is our secret?". Advertiser's weekly. London: Admark Publishing Co. June 1953. p. 497.
  8. ^ "Death of a dear friend to the Association". Guider. London: Girl Guides Association. December 1979. p. 539.
  9. ^ "The Books of the Month". The Kensington News and West London Times. London, UK. 1957-03-29. p. 10.
  10. ^ "All sorts of gossip". Evening Chronicle. Newcastle upon Tyne, UK. 1935-10-23. p. 8.
  11. ^ Jessica Maxted (1944-06-02). "What about a family?". International Woman Suffrage News. London, UK. p. 11.
  12. ^ Collier, Madeleine (1944). The Noddles Again. London: St Martin’s Press.
  13. ^ "Back again". The Observer. London, UK. 1948-03-07. p. 2.
  14. ^ "Two novelists with a penchant for exactitude". The Sphere. London, UK. 1948-01-31. p. 30.
  15. ^ Pearl, Irene (1948). Fables for Children. London: London.
  16. ^ "Children's Stories". Daily Mail. London, UK. 1949-12-09. p. 4.
  17. ^ "The Purple Muffin Book". Yorkshire Evening Post. Leeds, UK. 1953-08-13. p. 4.
  18. ^ Scottish Council, for Research in Education (1955). The Scottish Pupil's Spelling Book. London: University of London Press.
  19. ^ Arthurton, Eileen (1957). The Helpful Giant. London: London.
  20. ^ Elston, Charles (1958). Fluent French Comedies. London: London.
  21. ^ "Children's Bedtime books to ease day's end". Edmonton Journal. Edmonton, Canada. 1981-12-05. p. 4.
  22. ^ Barnard, Geoffrey (1959). Better spoken English. London: London.
  23. ^ "Wild Rose of the King's Chase". The Birmingham Post and Birmingham Gazette. Birmingham, UK. 1960-05-24. p. 4.
  24. ^ Boyce, E R (1961). Gay way. London: MacMillan and Co.
  25. ^ Vickery, Frederick (1961). Measuring is fun. London: St Martin’s Press.
  26. ^ Bowker, R R (1978). American Publishing Record Cumulative, 1950–1977. New York: Bowker. p. 82.
  27. ^ Dereham, Jenny (2014). Mrs Griffin sends her love and other writings. London, UK: Orion Books. p. 310. ISBN 9781409148142.
  28. ^ Dereham, Jenny (2014). Mrs Griffin sends her love and other writings. London, UK: Orion Books. p. 310. ISBN 9781409148142.
  29. ^ Bowker, R R (1978). American Publishing Record Cumulative, 1950-1977. New York, USA: Bowker. p. 443.
  30. ^ Whiteman, Bruce (1985). A bibliography of Macmillan of Canada Imprints, 1906-1080. Toronto: Macmilllan Company of Canada. p. 265.
  31. ^ "Nursery Rhymes". Homes and Gardens (Vol. 30 ed.). London: Future PLC. July 1948. p. 69.
  32. ^ "Snakes and Ladders". Modern Woman (Vol. 68 No. 9 ed.). London: George Newnes. April 1946. p. 70.
  33. ^ "Miracle at Greccio". Argosy (Vol. 12 No. 1 ed.). London: Fleetway Publications. December 1960. p. 7.
  34. ^ "Death of a dear friend to the Association". Guider. London: Girl Guides Association. December 1979. p. 539.
  35. ^ Madeleine Collier and Jennetta Vise (August 1965). "The Woolly Farm". Child Education. London, UK: Scholastic. p. 2.
  36. ^ "Horses as Collectors". The Guardian. London, UK. 1935-01-21. p. 8.