Become a Member
Life

Winning the war with posters and paint - the work of Abram Games

Johnny Belknap admires Britain's best graphic designer

March 21, 2019 14:21
Some of Abram Games' posters from the war

ByJohnny Belknap, Johnny Belknapp

5 min read

If you think our politicians do nothing but dither under pressure, it might be some comfort to know that in 1941, beneath a nightly rain of German bombs, Parliament spent weeks debating whether the model for a women’s army recruitment poster was wearing too much lipstick.

The author of this poster, 27-year old graphic designer Abram Games, was not pleased. He had been commissioned by the War Office PR agency to make a poster to persuade women to join the ATS, the new women’s branch of the army. They needed 140,000 recruits, but the public perceived the ATS as drab and dowdy.

Games reasoned that women were willing to join but wanted a touch of glamour as well. Sketching from a live model he met by chance, he produced the iconic “Blonde Bombshell” poster. In his distinctly modern style, which must have seemed like it was from outer space at the time, he combined a beautiful airbrushed image with powerful shapes, typography and colours.

It was enthusiastically approved by the Ministry of Information and the War Office PR deparment, but in their rush to go to print they forgot to consult the head of ATS. She hated it. Looks like an ad for lipstick, she said. She, Games and others involved argued fiercely. She eventually relented. But it was only the first of many reactions to the poster.