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Antonia Yeoman

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Antonia Yeoman
Beryl Yeoman
Born
Beryl Botterill Thompson

24 July 1907
Died30 June 1970 (1970-07-01) (aged 62)
NationalityUnited Kingdom
OccupationCartoonist

Antonia Yeoman born Beryl Botterill Thompson sometimes known as Anton (24 July 1907 – 30 June 1970) was an Australian-English cartoonist and illustrator.

Life

Yeoman was born in Esk in Queensland, Australia as Beryl Botterill Thompson. Her father was an English rancher and he oversaw a sheep farm.[1] Her parents took her to visit England where her brother was born and her father died. Her mother Ida May (Cooke), who had been a Brisbane headteacher, decided to settle in the UK in Brighton. Yeoman suffered from tuberculosis of the spine throughout her childhood. She had to use her other[clarification needed] hand after the disease took two of her fingers. Nevertheless, she trained at the Royal Academy and under artist and painter Stephen Spurrier.[2]

Yeoman's first popular cartoons were as part of the partnership with her brother, Harold Underwood Thompson. Together they published under the name of "Anton" in the late 1930s.[3] In time her brother found other interests directing an advertising company but Yeoman continued on alone.[1] Yeoman worked regularly for The Tatler, Men Only, The New Yorker, London's Evening Standard, Private Eye, Lilliput, and Punch.[2][3] She was the only woman in Punch's Toby Club.[3]

In addition to illustrating 17 books, Yeoman also produced two collections of her own works: Anton's Amusement Arcade (1947) and High Life and Low Life (1952).[3]

Yeoman died in Chelsea in 1970.[2]

References

  1. ^ a b Mark Bryant, ‘Yeoman, Antonia (1907–1970)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 10 April 2017
  2. ^ a b c Beryl Yeoman, British Cartoon Archive, Retrieved 10 April 2017
  3. ^ a b c d Streeten, Nicola; Tate, Cath (2018). The inking woman: 250 years of women cartoon and comic artists in Britain. Oxford: Myriad Editions. p. 25. ISBN 0-9955900-8-7. OCLC 1007312174.