'Execution of Mad Dog Lola in Méchéria' [Mecheria]
During the Second World War, John Kingsley Cook (1911-94) served in the merchant navy as a wireless officer. He joined in 1940, and went on his first sea voyage, to the United States, in December 1940. His ship was sunk off the coast of Algeria in 1941, the survivors being taken captive and held there until liberated after the Allied landing in North Africa in 1942. He resumed service after a few months recuperating at home, and was discharged in August 1945, when he joined the staff at the Edinburgh College of Art. There, he taught engraving and graphic design and lectured on the History of Art, before being appointed Head of Design in 1960. He retired in 1971.
Throughout the war, Cook drew life at sea and in captivity. He also created a number of retrospective drawings in the 1980s, when he was working on his (as yet unpublished) memoirs. 262 drawings and 2 paintings of his wartime experiences were presented by his family to the National Maritime Museum in 2012.
Stray dogs roamed the Algerian camp of Méchéria. Among them was one called Mad Dog Lola who attracted the sympathy of the British prisoners. Cook described her seductive features and long eyelashes as those of a movie star, spoke of her antics and mischievous nature, but also noted her infuriating barking at night. This lead to complaints and the camp commandant ordered the destruction of every dog in the place. Lola’s execution was particularly upsetting to Cook, who poignantly sketched her last moments some forty years later, when he worked on his memoirs.
Throughout the war, Cook drew life at sea and in captivity. He also created a number of retrospective drawings in the 1980s, when he was working on his (as yet unpublished) memoirs. 262 drawings and 2 paintings of his wartime experiences were presented by his family to the National Maritime Museum in 2012.
Stray dogs roamed the Algerian camp of Méchéria. Among them was one called Mad Dog Lola who attracted the sympathy of the British prisoners. Cook described her seductive features and long eyelashes as those of a movie star, spoke of her antics and mischievous nature, but also noted her infuriating barking at night. This lead to complaints and the camp commandant ordered the destruction of every dog in the place. Lola’s execution was particularly upsetting to Cook, who poignantly sketched her last moments some forty years later, when he worked on his memoirs.
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Object Details
ID: | ZBA5362 |
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Collection: | Fine art |
Type: | Drawing |
Display location: | Not on display |
Creator: | Cook, John Kingsley |
Places: | London; Malta |
Date made: | 1980s |
Exhibition: | War Artists at Sea |
Credit: | National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, London. Presented by the artist's family, 2012. |
Measurements: | Overall: 196 mm x 365 mm |