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  • 00:20

    The first time I became aware of the illustrations of William Heath Robinson

  • 00:24

    was when I stumbled across this paper back while scouring the shelves of a

  • 00:29

    bookshop. I was 16 years old and from that moment onward he has remained at the

  • 00:34

    top of my list of favourite illustrators and although there are plenty of others

  • 00:39

    on the list none has had a strong or as enduring an impact on me.

  • 00:44

    William Heath Robinson was born into a middle-class artistically inclined

  • 00:49

    family in north London in 1872 and he was obsessive about drawing from a very

  • 00:56

    early age. In 1887 he left school at the age of only 15 and following a spell

  • 01:03

    at Islington art school he managed to get a place at the prestigious Royal

  • 01:07

    Academy School in London but he found the unimaginative drawing assignments

  • 01:13

    tedious and he never completed the course. He originally planned a career as

  • 01:19

    a landscape artist but it soon became clear this would not be his path to

  • 01:23

    prosperity. Both his older brothers Charles and Thomas were by this time

  • 01:29

    doing quite well as illustrators of books and magazines.

  • 01:33

    So William abandoned his landscape ambitions, quickly put together a

  • 01:37

    portfolio of illustration and began lugging his work from publisher to

  • 01:42

    publisher. He was far from an overnight success but he did get enough work to

  • 01:48

    convince him to persevere and soon he was sharing a dilapidated studio in a

  • 01:54

    run-down part of London with fellow illustrator and friend Percy Billinghurst.

  • 01:59

    In 1897 through to 1899 both he and Billinghurst picked up commissions

  • 02:07

    from various publishers for badly printed cheap editions of books such as

  • 02:12

    the tales of Hans Christian Andersen and the Arabian Nights.

  • 02:17

    And with work coming in on a regular basis they were able to relocate to more

  • 02:22

    respectable premises in a better part of the capitol. William Heath Robinson was

  • 02:29

    one of the generation of illustrators who were no longer constrained by the

  • 02:33

    limitations of woodblock printing. The recent advances in print technology

  • 02:39

    meant they could now render drawings in pen and ink which could be transferred

  • 02:43

    direct to the printing press without undergoing the engraving process. And Heath

  • 02:49

    Robinson took full advantage of this freedom with a series of sophisticated

  • 02:54

    line illustrations for a collection of the poetry of Edgar Allen Poe published

  • 02:59

    in 1900. He created a series of aesthetically stunning and emotive

  • 03:06

    monochrome visual interpretations of Poe's verses using pen and ink with an

  • 03:12

    authority and descriptive sensitivity that most could only dream of and this

  • 03:17

    body of work represented a major step forward in his status and reputation as

  • 03:22

    an illustrator. All his monochromes from this period used a wide range of ink

  • 03:29

    hatching techniques to evoke all kinds of material and texture from clouds to

  • 03:34

    fabric and hair to foliage with remarkable dexterity. In 1902 Heath

  • 03:41

    Robinson's illustrated edition of The Adventures of Don Quixote by Miguel

  • 03:46

    Cervantes was published and crucially for this book he was able to work in

  • 03:51

    black and white and to demonstrate what he was capable of using watercolour.

  • 03:57

    Once full colour print technology had arrived more expensive editions of books

  • 04:02

    began to appear featuring full-page illustrations using the process and

  • 04:08

    Heath Robinsons talent for expressive and aesthetically pleasing watercolour

  • 04:12

    stood him in particularly good stead, competing confidently with others

  • 04:17

    such as Arthur Rackham and Edmond Dulac. In that same year Robinson's own

  • 04:23

    children's book The Adventures of Uncle Lubin was also published. Although the

  • 04:29

    book was only illustrated in black and white it featured a narrative and a set

  • 04:33

    of memorable fantasy images every bit was believably absurd and surreal as

  • 04:38

    those created for Alice in Wonderland by John Tenniel almost half a century

  • 04:42

    before.The book sold in reasonable numbers but it was far from the runaway

  • 04:48

    success it deserved to be. By 1903 Heath Robinson felts financially secure

  • 04:55

    enough to get married and in the same year he acquired an agent A.R. Johnson to

  • 05:00

    deal with clients and manage money - two things that he detested about the

  • 05:04

    freelance life - and although Johnson did get him a lot of high-profile work

  • 05:10

    apparently he wasn't much better than Heath Robinson at negotiating

  • 05:14

    comparably higher fees. Nevertheless it was to prove a lifelong and apparently

  • 05:20

    amicable relationship. In 1904 there were no less than five published volumes of

  • 05:27

    the work a french medieval writer Francois Rabelais illustrated by Heath

  • 05:31

    Robinson. It may have been an unlikely pairing of author and illustrator given

  • 05:37

    the frequently dark, violent and sexual nature of Rabelais stories but the

  • 05:43

    monochromes created were some of Heath Robinson's most compelling and

  • 05:47

    skillfully rendered images. This large and impressive collection

  • 05:52

    showed an illustrator totally in control of his medium and he used his prowess

  • 05:57

    with ink to evoke the art of the woodblock prints of the great

  • 06:01

    Renaissance artists such as Albrecht Durer.

  • 06:05

    Following on from his success with Don Quixote quite a few more commissions for

  • 06:11

    books with colour pages for both children and adults came his way in the next few

  • 06:15

    years. There was an edition of Shakespeare's fantasy tale Twelfth Night

  • 06:20

    which was published in 1908 and only a year later there was the dramatic

  • 06:26

    visualization of Rudyard Kipling's A Song of the English and both these works

  • 06:32

    provided further proof of his abilities in both colour and monochrome.Ten years

  • 06:38

    after the publication of Uncle Lubin Heath Robinson's second children's storybook

  • 06:43

    Bill the Minder was published in 1912 and this time the book featured some

  • 06:49

    full-page watercolours. Once again he created a wildly nonsensical story and a

  • 06:55

    series of breathtakingly assured images throughout. This book proved to be

  • 07:00

    considerably more popular than his first outing and it's considered rightly by

  • 07:05

    many to be a pinnacle in Heath Robinson's work. Throughout the second

  • 07:11

    decade of the 20th century there were several more lavishly Illustrated and

  • 07:15

    expensively printed stories and collections which followed. These

  • 07:20

    included an opportunity to revisit Andersen's fairy tales in 1913 and in a

  • 07:26

    remarkable flurry of activity he followed this up with Shakespeare's A

  • 07:30

    Midsummer Night's Dream in 1914 and Charles Kingsley's the Water Babies in

  • 07:35

    1915. Despite the volume of images created in a very short time there was

  • 07:42

    no visible loss of quality in any of the work. When the Great War

  • 07:48

    broke out in 1914 William Heath Robinson was already 42 and too old to fight so

  • 07:55

    he set about drawing large numbers of wartime cartoons

  • 07:58

    most of them appearing in the popular magazines the Sketch and the Bystander.

  • 08:03

    But these comical images made no mention of the misery or brutality of war.

  • 08:08

    Instead they were a development of what had begun tentatively with Uncle Lubin

  • 08:13

    in 1902 - the triumph of hopeless improvised impossible machinery and an

  • 08:20

    oddly plausible perversion of the laws of nature depicting preposterous weapons

  • 08:25

    and military devices being used by the combatants. And as well as appearing in

  • 08:31

    the magazines they were also published as book collections. By the time the war

  • 08:38

    had ended William Heath Robinson had become a household name in Britain

  • 08:42

    almost entirely due to this body of cartoons rather than what he referred to

  • 08:47

    as his serious work. And it's from these drawings that the term Heath Robinson

  • 08:53

    device meaning any improvised or unlikely contraption derives. If you're

  • 09:00

    American you'll probably recognize this better as a Rube Goldberg machine, named

  • 09:06

    for the cartoonist who created similar images around the same time. Demand for

  • 09:12

    this aspect of Heath Robinson's work became even greater and his absurd

  • 09:16

    inventions and improbable gravity defying scenarios featured in virtually

  • 09:21

    every publication of the 20s and 30s and made good-natured fun of many aspects of

  • 09:27

    everyday 20th century British life. And this in turn led to a lot of advertising

  • 09:33

    work coming his way. By this point it was well understood that

  • 09:38

    humour was an invaluable tool in advertising and there were many press

  • 09:42

    and poster campaigns which relied on the comic visual appeal of his mad

  • 09:46

    inventions to attract and more importantly hold the attention of

  • 09:51

    potential customers. William Heath Robinson and his family

  • 09:56

    had been living in the London suburb of Pinner up to this point but once the war

  • 10:00

    was over they moved to the village of Cranleigh and in addition to the vast

  • 10:04

    amount of commercial illustration he was creating he also found time to paint

  • 10:09

    watercolours of the surrounding countryside. His illustrated edition of

  • 10:15

    Perrault's Old Time Stories was published in 1921 and this was a clear indication

  • 10:21

    that he was still a master of fantasy even if most of his income was now

  • 10:26

    coming from his humorous work in magazines or advertising campaigns.

  • 10:32

    Published in 1922 Peter Quip in Search of a Friend was the last of the three

  • 10:37

    children's books Heath Robinson would author. This book was another agreeable

  • 10:43

    fantasy quest story and although the coloured pages were far

  • 10:47

    more graphic and flat than those of Bill the Minder this was merely a

  • 10:51

    reflection of how style in children's publishing was evolving with fussier

  • 10:56

    forms of traditional application of colour becoming less fashionable. This was also

  • 11:01

    reflected in Heath Robinson's humorous pull of work of the period. In 1929 the

  • 11:08

    family moved again and settled for good in Highgate North London and by now it

  • 11:14

    was an apparently never-ending stream of humorous drawings for magazines

  • 11:18

    advertisements and books which was keeping him busy. Traditional fairy tale

  • 11:25

    book work had all but disappeared but in 1933 Heath Robinson's illustrations for

  • 11:31

    the first in the series of professor Branestawm books written by Norman

  • 11:35

    Hunter increased the book's appeal and it's sales.

  • 11:39

    when the Second World War began in 1939 Heath Robinson returned to his wartime

  • 11:45

    absurdities but he would not live long enough to see the eventual victory of

  • 11:50

    Britain and the Allies. The last project he worked on was a set of black-and-white

  • 11:56

    illustrations for Lillian Clopek's short story collection Once Upon a Time, which

  • 12:01

    was published in 1944. And that was the year William Heath Robinson died at the

  • 12:08

    age of 72. In modern Britain William Heath Robertson hasn't yet reached unsung

  • 12:15

    hero status but he is far from a household name and any reference to

  • 12:21

    Heath Robinson machines will probably die out with my generation so I hope

  • 12:26

    this tribute will help to keep his flame lit with at least a couple of new

  • 12:29

    converts out there and maybe this has gone some way to repaying the enormous

  • 12:34

    debt of gratitude I and countless other illustrators owe to the genius of

  • 12:39

    William Heath Robinson

All

The example sentences of NATURED in videos (14 in total of 14)

i personal pronoun 'll modal use verb, base form some determiner des noun, plural natured adjective alcohol noun, singular or mass to to clean adjective the determiner block noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction then adverb i personal pronoun 'll modal use verb, base form this determiner
every determiner publication noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner 20 cardinal number s proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction 30 cardinal number s proper noun, singular and coordinating conjunction made verb, past participle good adjective - natured adjective fun noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction many adjective aspects noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction
there adverb , it personal pronoun is verb, 3rd person singular present the determiner power noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction action noun, singular or mass alone adverb that wh-determiner is verb, 3rd person singular present wanting verb, gerund or present participle ; and coordinating conjunction this determiner good adjective - natured adjective , honest adjective
but coordinating conjunction i personal pronoun mean verb, non-3rd person singular present , they personal pronoun 're verb, non-3rd person singular present lovely adjective natured adjective animals noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction general adjective , unless preposition or subordinating conjunction - any determiner animal noun, singular or mass really adverb , i personal pronoun suppose verb, non-3rd person singular present ,
the determiner big adjective men noun, plural in preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner other adjective boat noun, singular or mass crews noun, plural would modal always adverb make verb, base form good adjective - natured adjective fun noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner tiny adjective little adjective
her possessive pronoun morality noun, singular or mass luann proper noun, singular at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner end noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner day noun, singular or mass is verb, 3rd person singular present a determiner good adjective - natured adjective person noun, singular or mass simple adjective and coordinating conjunction
herself personal pronoun in preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner love noun, singular or mass triangle noun, singular or mass between preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner good adjective natured adjective scot proper noun, singular , and coordinating conjunction fellow noun, singular or mass new adjective kid noun, singular or mass gabe proper noun, singular , who wh-pronoun
they personal pronoun are verb, non-3rd person singular present the determiner most adverb, superlative gentle adjective - natured adjective of preposition or subordinating conjunction all determiner apes noun, plural and coordinating conjunction would modal sit verb, base form for preposition or subordinating conjunction hours noun, plural gazing verb, gerund or present participle at preposition or subordinating conjunction nothing noun, singular or mass in preposition or subordinating conjunction particular adjective .
comes verb, 3rd person singular present from preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner earth noun, singular or mass and coordinating conjunction they personal pronoun feel verb, non-3rd person singular present natured adjective and coordinating conjunction you personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present it personal pronoun 's verb, 3rd person singular present sort noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction like preposition or subordinating conjunction burying verb, gerund or present participle a determiner crystal noun, singular or mass you personal pronoun
good adjective - natured adjective boy noun, singular or mass because preposition or subordinating conjunction he personal pronoun worked verb, past tense as preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner history noun, singular or mass lecturer noun, singular or mass at preposition or subordinating conjunction new proper noun, singular york proper noun, singular university proper noun, singular to to support verb, base form his possessive pronoun
there adverb s proper noun, singular a determiner respect noun, singular or mass for preposition or subordinating conjunction each determiner other adjective s proper noun, singular beliefs noun, plural , even adverb if preposition or subordinating conjunction there adverb s proper noun, singular some determiner good adjective - natured adjective ribbing noun, singular or mass about preposition or subordinating conjunction where wh-adverb
fairy noun, singular or mass tale noun, singular or mass won verb, past tense my possessive pronoun heart noun, singular or mass , while preposition or subordinating conjunction also adverb having verb, gerund or present participle some determiner good adjective natured adjective laughs noun, plural at preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner ridiculous adjective parts noun, plural .
the determiner overall adjective fun noun, singular or mass - natured adjective feel noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner square noun, singular or mass dude noun, singular or mass to to me personal pronoun just adverb do verb, non-3rd person singular present n't adverb translate verb, base form too adverb well adverb in preposition or subordinating conjunction this determiner animation noun, singular or mass
but coordinating conjunction instead adverb , agreed verb, past tense that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner role noun, singular or mass of preposition or subordinating conjunction successor noun, singular or mass should modal go verb, base form to to their possessive pronoun mellow noun, singular or mass , good adjective - natured adjective and coordinating conjunction hard adjective drinking noun, singular or mass brother noun, singular or mass , ogedei proper noun, singular

Use "natured" in a sentence | "natured" example sentences

How to use "natured" in a sentence?

  • A cheerful temper, joined with innocence will make beauty attractive, knowledge delightful, and wit good-natured.
    -Joseph Addison-
  • A gentle word, a kind look, a good-natured smile can work wonders and accomplish miracles.
    -William Hazlitt-
  • The guys on the stunt team are really fantastic. It's really funny, because for all the aggression they have to display on screen, they're actually really happy, good- natured people.
    -Miranda Otto-
  • My god is a cheerful, pleasant, lively, and good-natured being.
    -Heber C. Kimball-
  • They are the follies inherent to youth; I make sport of them, and, if you are kind, you will not yourself refuse them a good-natured smile.
    -Giacomo Casanova-
  • Fathers like to have children good-natured, well-behaved, and comfortable, but how to put them in that desirable condition is out of their philosophy.
    -Ernestine Rose-
  • From sixteen to twenty, all women, kept in humor by their hopes and by their attractions, appear to be good-natured.
    -Samuel Richardson-
  • God bless the good-natured, for they bless everybody else.
    -Henry Ward Beecher-

Definition and meaning of NATURED

What does "natured mean?"

/ˈnāCHərd/

adjective
Having a character, nature as specified.