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architect, cartoonist, watercolourist, illustrator and teacher, was born of a Catholic family in
During WWII Molnar was a designer for the Ministry of Munitions (located in David Jones,
Unhappy with Packer’s editorial intervention at the Telegraph, Molnar moved in February 1954 [McCulloch says 1953; 1965 Year Book says associated with SMH since 1952 but both wrong] to the Sydney Morning Herald as its leader-page cartoonist (alternating with Eyre Jr) at editor John Pringle’s instigation (Souter, 328). Cartoons done for the SMH include: a 1966 cartoon on State Aid (ill. Coleman & Tanner, 86). 20 of his cartoons were included in Walsh’s 1966 anthology.
Original Molnar cartoons in ML include Two Decades of U.S. Painting [3 large black canvases] 22 July 1967 (Px*D249-38); I decided to forgive Captain Cook (Aborigine being kicked out by whites demonstrating against 'invasion’ etc) dated 4 April 1970 (original ML Px*D460, p.18); and the Whitlams dressing for a formal evening occasion with Mrs W. adjusting her husband’s tie and saying: And the tie slightly askew. We have to uphold Labor principles 24 April 1973.
Molnar continued his Saturday cartoon on the Herald until 1984 while simultaneously lecturing in Architecture at SU (there from 1944?) under Prof. Leslie Wilkinson. He despised Wilkinson’s successor Professor Ashworth and in 1967 moved to UNSW as an Associate Professor in Architecture, where he remained until he retired in 1975. He also drew and exhibited his work in galleries. At the Macquarie Galleries in 1955 he had an exhibition of drawings and pastels. He began doing watercolours in the 1970s and held an exhibition of his watercolours and some drawings (probably of his travels) at
“Kenneth Slessor
Waiting in Vain
For Magic
To Finish Poem
Exchanges Same
For Fish.”
Molnar retired from regular Herald cartooning in 1984. He held solo exhibitions of his cartoons, drawings and splendid watercolour paintings (cartoons as 'high art’) at Holdsworth Galleries in 1984, 1987 and 1989. Another exhibition, mainly of his watercolours, was planned before he died in November 1998 and held soon afterwards at
Molnar always had something pithy, relevant and funny to say in his cartoons. He drew several pointed ones about the condition of Aborigines, e.g. on the return of land to the Gurinji people ('Roam!’) and on the 1970 Cook Bicentenary ('I’ve decided to forgive Captain Cook’). Good architecture/society cartoons drawn for the Sydney Morning Herald include: “Darling, if you want to look at the view you must go inside. What do you think we got the glass wall for?” 1959 (reproduced in Molnar’s anthology Insubstantial Pageant and in Vane Lindesay 1979, 288). Nuclear Demo of 3 June 1971 and Sacred Site of 9 April 1982 were included in Christine Dixon’s
ML has a large collection of Molnar cartoons, the SMH retains some and Carol Molnar also has a lot. Others are spread around public collections in smaller number. In February 1997 Josef Lebovic had a nice simple original ink drawing of two students sitting on a professor entitled …A
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