Banned saucy seaside postcards by Donald McGill go on show 				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 Bawdy seaside postcards that sold by their millions before World War Two are    to go on display for the first time since they were banned for indecency in    1954. 
  
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 The risqué collection by Donald McGill, which features corpulent old ladies,    drunk middle-aged men and salacious vicars, have been put on show at a new    museum. 
  
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 McGill was a prolific artist, designing more than 12,000 cards over six    decades, and selling more than 200 million cards in British seaside towns 
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 But a particularly raunchy collection was banned due to their inappropriate    content during a clean-up of British seaside resorts in 1954, and the artist    charged with publishing obscene images. 
  
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 Now each can be viewed at a museum in Ryde, on the Isle of Wight, which is    home to the world's largest collection of McGill's work. 
  
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 The artist's fame was such that George Orwell termed him "the most prolific    and by far the best of contemporary postcard artists." 
  
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 At the height of his fame McGill only earned three guineas a design, but today    his original artwork sells for up to £1,700 in auction and up to £2,500 in    London galleries 
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 James Bissell-Thomas, owner of the Donald McGill Postcard Museum, said: "What    is startling is how innocent the majority of these 'obscene' cards were... 
  
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 "It seemed to be a bit of a witch hunt and was really very sad. Many of the    images had been on display in the 1930s and 1940s and they were suddenly    seen as a threat to society. " 
  
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							 The artist's career began in 1904 when he sent a cartoon to a nephew in    hospital which featured a man up to his neck in a frozen pond and read "Hope    you get out!"     It was submitted to a publisher who commissioned his work, and he went on to    design a number of cards riddled with double-entendres ranging from the    clever to the vulgar. 
  
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							One of the banned saucy seaside postcards by Donald McGill 
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							A self-portrait by Donald McGill 
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							An Isle of Man Censors' stamp on a card that was not approved for sale 
 
 
   				 			 			 			 	 		 			   						 							 							A stamp indicating that a card had been approved for sale 
 
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