Janette Scott Group

£55.00£155.00

Four pop art prints featuring the actress Janette Scott from the “School for Scoundrels” collection

Also available individually and as part of a group of prints.

Unframed art giclée prints, printed on 310gsm fine art museum-quality matte paper, made from 100% cotton, using archival pigment inks for longevity.

Choose from 20 colours – mix or match to suit your space.
Available in A4, A3, and A2 sizes to fit standard-size frames.

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  • Select with or without Text for the School For Scoundrels print

Four pop art prints of the actress Janette Scott from the “School for Scoundrels” collection by Art & Hue inspired by the classic British comedy – for yourself or as a gift for a fan of classic & cult films.

Available in A4, A3, and A2 sizes to fit standard-size picture frames. Please note that black frames are not included – for our guide on choosing a frame size take a look here.

An official collaboration with Studiocanal, these prints are part of the School for Scoundrels collection of stylish pop art prints inspired by the classic British comedy film, featuring Art & Hue’s signature halftone style (halftone is an age-old technique that uses dots to make up the printed image, similar to newspapers or comic books).

School for Scoundrels Pop Art
Group of four stylish pop art prints of the actress Janette Scott in the classic comedy film “School for Scoundrels“, available in three sizes & 20 colour options.

Also available individually and as part of a group of eight prints.

Art & Hue presents School for Scoundrels stylish pop art prints

Art & Hue’s collection of stylish pop art inspired by the 1960 film “School for Scoundrels” celebrates the wit & whimsy of the classic film, designed to bring classic cinema into the home.

Premiering at London’s Warner cinema on the 24th of March in 1960, the film is based on a popular series of books on One-upmanship written by Stephen Potter, published during the 1940s and 1950s, in which he explained “how to win without actually cheating”.

The tongue-in-cheek self-help books gave tips on how to gain the psychological advantage over everyone else because otherwise, as Alastair Sim‘s version of Stephen Potter puts it in the film, “if you’re not one-up, you’re one-down”.

Starring Terry-Thomas, Ian Carmichael, Alastair Sim & Janette Scott, and classic set pieces, such as the tennis matches, Peter Ustinov as an uncredited co-writer, and cameos from John Le Mesurier and Irene Handl, School for Scoundrels is a pleasurable example of Mid-Century British cinema that charms to this day. School for Scoundrels was art director Terence Verity’s last film before returning to architecture. He went on to design the M6 motorway service station Charnock Richard.

Rewatch, or discover anew, the film on DVD & Bluray from Amazon.

School for Scoundrels” Copyright © STUDIOCANAL Films Ltd, (1960). All rights reserved. Copyright © Art & Hue® 2016-2025. All rights reserved.

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