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Games was just establishing his own studio when WWII began.  He served in the British Army as a private in the infantry, where he spent the bulk of his time drawing training maps, a job both he and his superiors found him painfully unsuited for.
 
Games was just establishing his own studio when WWII began.  He served in the British Army as a private in the infantry, where he spent the bulk of his time drawing training maps, a job both he and his superiors found him painfully unsuited for.
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Upon his successful submission of a recruiting poster, he was assigned full-time to the War Office and created posters for the duration of hostilities. Working with a small staff in the confines of the War Office attic, Games became the first and only official British war poster designer.  He created over 100 various recruiting, propaganda and educational posters during the War. Games’s work earned him high praise and quick advancement through the ranks.  He attained the rank of Captain and later received the Order of the British Empire in 1958.
  
 
== Contact ==
 
== Contact ==

Revision as of 00:02, 19 September 2009

About

Games, Abram (July 28, 1914-August 27, 1996)
Artistic Motto:” Maximum meaning, minimum means."

Considered a master of 20th Century graphic design, Games was born Abraham Gamse in the Whitechapel neighborhood of London on the very day the First World War began. He was the son of a Jewish-Latvian, fine-art photographer Joseph Gamse, and a Russian-Polish seamstress Sarah. In 1926, His father anglicized their family name to Games.

At the age of 16, Games left Hackney Downs School to attend the St. Martins School of Art now known as the Central Saint Martins College of Art and Design, in London. The costs and teaching styles at St Martins were not agreeable to Games, and he left following his second term after being told he had “no artistic talent.”

He found work at the Askew-Young design firm as a studio boy between 1932 and 1936; he found time to take life drawing classes at night school. A second-place award in 1934 in the Health Council Competition followed by a first prize in the London City Council Competition the subsequent year set him on his path as a freelance artist.

Games was just establishing his own studio when WWII began. He served in the British Army as a private in the infantry, where he spent the bulk of his time drawing training maps, a job both he and his superiors found him painfully unsuited for.

Upon his successful submission of a recruiting poster, he was assigned full-time to the War Office and created posters for the duration of hostilities. Working with a small staff in the confines of the War Office attic, Games became the first and only official British war poster designer. He created over 100 various recruiting, propaganda and educational posters during the War. Games’s work earned him high praise and quick advancement through the ranks. He attained the rank of Captain and later received the Order of the British Empire in 1958.

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