Object number
2009/21/1-2
Title
Farmer Palmer,
Collection
Exhibition
Creator
Description
This mug, from 1993, was produced by Downpace Ltd for Viz Magazine, and depicts the comic's characters Farmer Palmer and his son Jethro, in box. Viz started in 1979 and by 1999 was selling more than 1 million copies per issue, and its characters Falmer Palmer and Jethro are over-the-top caricatures of anti-farming stereotypes. The mug is white, with colour transfer printed decoration, reading 'Farmer Palmer' and showing a picture of Farmer Palmer and Jethro sitting on a tractor. A transfer on the base of the mug reads 'Viz Official Merchandise' and 'Downpace Ltd'. The mug comes in its original box.
Physical description
Farmer Palmer mug; good condition
Archival history
MERL 'Handwritten accession' form (Museum of English Rural Life) – 'Pottery mug, white, with colour transfer printed decoration. // Printed on side in purple: 'Farmer Palmer' with picture of Farmer Palmer and Jethro sitting on a tractor. // Transfer on base of mug says 'Viz Official Merchandise' and 'Downpace Ltd'. // ... Purchased as part of the Collecting Twentieth Century Rural Culture Project.', MERL OLIB database note – 'Farmer Palmer mug with box - see 2009/21/2. // Farmer Palmer first appeared at the start of the 1990s, the creation of cartoonist Simon Thorp (1965-) who was behind a gallery of some of the comic's other stalwart characters including Eight Ace, Finbarr Saunders and Student Grant. he had been producing work for Viz since the mid-1980s, shortly before it hit the bigtime. From small beginnings in 1979, a cottage industry run from a suburban bedroom in Newcastle, Viz was selling more than 1 million copies per issue by 1990, putting it in the same league as The Radio Times and Reader's Digest and turning it into an anarchic institution in its own right. It thrived on original humorous content that was outrageously crude, peurile and offensive and in so doing developed a readership profile far wider than might have been predicted. Dog shooting ('Ee wuz wurryin moy sheep') Farmer Palmer and his dim-witted son Jethro are way over the top caricatures of just about every anti-farming stereotype that our culture can come up with.', Collecting 20thc Rural Culture blog [Thursday, 6 August 2009] – ''Oi! Get orf moy laand!' // Following a suggestion made at the recent Social History Curators Group conference, we are happy to oblige with these two new acquisitions relating to the Viz character Farmer Palmer. The first is a mug dating from 1993 complete with its original box. // Farmer Palmer first appeared at the start of the 1990s, the creation of cartoonist Simon Thorp (1965-) who was behind a gallery of some of the comic's other stalwart characters including Eight Ace, Finbarr Saunders and Student Grant. He had been producing work for Viz since the mid-1980s, shortly before it hit the bigtime. From small beginnings in 1979, a cottage industry run from a suburban befroom in Newcastle, Viz was selling more than 1 million copies per issue by 1990, putting it in the same league as The Radio Times and Reader's Digest and turning it into an anarchic institution in its own right. It thrived on original humorous content that was outrageously crude, peurile and offensive and in doing so developed a readership profile far wider than might have been predicted. // Dog shooting ('Ee wuz wurryin moy sheep') Farmer Palmer and his dim-witted son Jethro are way over the top caricatures of just about every anti-farming stereotype that our culture can come up with - that's why they're funny and important for this project // Our second item is a piece of original Simon Thorp artwork from the end of the century featuring Farmer Palmer and Jethro getting enthusiastically involved in a demonstration. This was the era of the Countryside March of 1998 that brought 250,000 people noisily to the streets of London to protest against an amalgam of grievances - including anti-hunt legislation - affecting the rural community. // Farmer Palmer is still going strong today, although Viz circulation has long since retreated from its earlier highs...'
Production date
1993 - 1993
Object name
Associated subject