Thursday, May 31, 2012

Herman creator Jim Unger dies at 75

"Your pulse is very, very weak!"

I met Jim Unger only once, at the 1989 National Cartoonist Society convention in Toronto.

Wednesday, May 30, 2012

Dutch Cartoonist Bert Witte 1943-2012

I just learned this morning of the passing of Bert Witte, third prize winner at the 3rd World Press Freedom International Editorial Cartoon Competition. Here was his winning entry:


Bert Witte was one of the most award-winning, published, prolific and versatile cartoonists in the world. He published 75 cartoon books, 6 calendars, provided illustrations for 51 books and won 26 international prizes. Witte drew a daily cartoon for De Telegraaf.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

37° Salão Internacional de Humor de Piracicaba

I received, at long last, the catalogue of the 37th International Humor Exhibition of Piracicaba in Brazil.


And here is the cartoon I entered that was selected:

Monday, May 28, 2012

2012 Reuben Award Winners Sorel, Kanin and Ramirez

Edward Sorel (Magazine Illustration), Zach Kanin (Gag Cartoon) and Mike Ramirez (Editorial Cartoon) were winners in their respective categories at the 2012 Reuben Awards Banquet in Las Vegas last night.

Mike Ramirez, Investor's Business Daily

Sunday, May 27, 2012

Save The American Prospect

From Brodner's Bicycle.

Below are some illustrations commissioned recently by The American Prospect.
Prospects for The American Prospect, a great magazine for politics and art, are looking dark. Now is the time for all good artists to come to the aid of their industry. This magazine weds journalism and illustration especially well because of its brilliant art director Mary Parsons. Many of us have worked with her at the Prospect as well as previously at The Atlantic and elsewhere. She understands the power of art and its place in print. As print shrinks we need to insist on a future where some publications can co-exist with web news. This is happening but not across the board. Print needs to survive because it communicates in a cohesive way that is different than on the web or in apps. It is a complete entity, designed with a beginning, middle and end. It has the potential (albeit sometimes unrealized) of being beautuiful and something to treasure, if only until the next issue. Mary and editor Bob Kuttner do that here. The journalism is top flight. Tough issues are explained with clarity and verve.
How can we help this magazine? By caring enough to contribute. The link is here. Please care about this. It's bigger than the Prospect. Bigger than any one of us alone.


Steve Brodner

Friday, May 25, 2012

New Yorker Cartoonist Mick Stevens

Here are some of my favourite Mike Stevens cartoons.

"I know what I said ten minutes ago. That was the old me talking."

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Glob-All Mix: 30 Posters for a Sustainable World

Steven Heller in Imprint.



Glob-All Mix: 30 Posters for a Sustainable World, curated by the Brazilian designer Felipe Taborda, is a poster project designed to compliment Rio+20, the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development, that includes as delegates many presidents, ministers, and monarchs. The Glob-All Mix posters (plus the catalog and postcards) are part of the official gift of the Brazilian government to all people attending Rio+20.

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Ronald Searle Remembered


Ronald Searle Punch cover

The Chris Beetles Gallery is hosting the exhibition Ronald Searle Remembered, in memory of the cartoonist who died in December.
The show, which starts today, features more than 400 works by Searle, who is widely regarded as the greatest cartoonist of the 20th century. It runs until June 9.
It includes some of the clandestine drawings he produced as an inmate of Changi Gaol, the notorious Japanese prisoner of war camp, Punch covers, such as the one above, plus book and magazine illustrations.
St Trinian’s and Molesworth are represented, of course, alongside adverts for Lemon Hart rum and Searle’s reportage on many issues of the day. Also included are unpublished letters that provide new insights into the life of the great man.

Monday, May 21, 2012

Political cartoonists go digital

From Need to Know on PBS.



Matt Wuerker was touching up the colors on a cartoon of President Obama wearing gym shorts, a tank top and sweatband, when he was interrupted by a sudden burst of commotion in the Politico newsroom. The Pulitzer Prize winners had just been announced online.

“It was very surprising,” said Wuerker, who hadn’t expected any sort of excitement during what seemed like a typical Monday afternoon. He had just won $10,000 and journalism’s top prize for his editorial cartoons. “The newsroom all jumped up, and I got to run around and high-five everyone.”

Friday, May 18, 2012

"Comics: Philosophy & Practice" at the University of Chicago

From Steven Heller at Imprint.


On May 18-20, the University of Chicago is hosting a conference called "Comics: Philosophy & Practice" that will bring together 17 world-renowned graphic novelists for three days of lectures and public conversation at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts. Attendees include Alison Bechdel, Lynda Barry, Daniel Clowes, R. Crumb, Joe Sacco, Art Spiegelman, and Chris Ware. The conference was organized by Hillary Chute, an English professor at U. Chicago and a leading expert on graphic narrative.For those who cannot attend, it will be webcasted throughout the weekend. Information about the webcast can be found here.

Thursday, May 17, 2012

Matt Bors, 2012 Herblock Prize Winner

Glenn Fleishman from Boing Boing:


Alt Cartoonist Receives High Praise from Establishment


Stereotypes abound of the political cartoonists found in so-called alternative papers: the weeklies full of escort ads in the back and snarky commentary in the front. Matt Bors, on the surface, seems to embody the characteristics.

He's scruffy, doesn't own a suit, and lives in Portland. He expresses withering contempt at politicians, mainstream media, and what he views as hypocrisy. He's never made more than $15,000 a year from his cartoons, and supplements that income with illustration, freelance editorial jobs, and, possibly, blood plasma—at least he did in college; he has the scar to prove it.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

Earth Day Cartoon



After "The racist is the Other...", my drawing of Earth as an apple is the most reproduced.

Sunday, May 13, 2012

Cartoon of the week (13)

Viewed 152 times on Twitpic.

Canada pulls out of the Kyoto Accord at the UN conference in Copenhagen and receives a damning report from the Environment Commissioner for not reaching it's lowered objectives.

Saturday, May 12, 2012

My lunch with Fred

Fred Sebastian is an Ottawa cartoonist who has published in The New York Times Book Review.
We have lunch together every week and came up with this gag* last Tuesday, two day's after François Hollande's electoral victory.
Here is a sample of his work:

Friday, May 11, 2012

Iranian cartoonist's conviction condemned

Saeed Kamali Dehghan from The Guardian website.

Cartoonist Mahmoud Shokraye given a sentence of 25 lashes for drawing a caricature of a local MP that was deemed insulting.

Ahmad Lofti AshtianiAhmad Lofti Ashtiani depicted dressed as a footballer, with a congratulatory letter in one hand and his foot resting on the ball. Photograph: Mahmoud Shokraye
Cartoonists have condemned the conviction of an Iranian colleague sentenced to 25 lashes for drawing a caricature of an MP that was deemed insulting.
Mahmoud Shokraye was put on trial after an Iranian MP, Ahmad Lotfi Ashtiani, took offence to a cartoon he drew of the parliamentarian in Nameye Amir, a city newspaper in Arak, the capital of Iran's central province of Markazi.
The Ilna semi-official news agency reported that a media law court in Markazi had found Shokraye guilty of insulting the MP, handing down the unprecedented punishment.
In the cartoon, Ashtiani is depicted in a football stadium, dressed as a footballer, with a congratulatory letter in one hand and his foot resting on the ball. The MP's forehead has a dark mark, said to be the sign of a pious Shia Muslim, caused (supposedly) by frequent prostration during prayer. The cartoon contains little exaggeration and Ashtiani's forehead has a prayer mark in reality.
Shokraye drew Ashtiani following widespread criticism in Iranian society towards a number of politicians who have been accused of interfering in the country's sports.
His sentence has sparked an outcry among cartoonists, with some calling on their colleagues to draw new caricatures of the MP in condemnation of the court's decision. Iran's online community has taken to social networking websites such as Twitter and Facebook to express anger.

Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Ben Franklin Penned First American Editorial Cartoon

From The Cagle Post.
On this day back in 1754, Benjamin Franklin’s now-famous “Join or Die” woodcut cartoon was first published in his Pennsylvania Gazette newspaper. The cartoon, which showed a snaked severed into eight segments each representing a British American colony or region, was meant to inspire unity among the colonies before the French and Indian War. Later, it became an important symbol of colonial freedom during the Revolutionary War.

Monday, May 7, 2012

Françoise Mouly talks about Blown Covers in Imprint

Michael Silverberg interviews "Blown Covers" editor Françoise Mouly in Imprint.


Thursday, May 3, 2012

12th World Press Freedom International Editorial Cartoon Competition (Results)

Grand Prize: Liz França (Brazil)

The jury of the 12th World Press Freedom International Editorial Cartoon Competition, composed of Rod Macdonell, Gord McIntosh and Guy Badeaux, met last month to choose the winners.
Our picks were announced at the World Press Freedom Day Luncheon at the NAC in Ottawa today.

"Freedom in Broad Strokes" (2012)

Here is the panel with the winning cartoons of the 2012 contest.















Wednesday, May 2, 2012

On Press Freedom Day, concerns raised about Harper government 'clampdown'

Gemma Karstens-Smith, For Postmedia News
Published: Wednesday, May 02, 2012





A brightly coloured gang - fists raised in protest - use their smartphones as armour against a row of riot gear-clad police. Hiding behind his shield, one policeman stealthily checks his own device.

No one, it seems, can resist the allure of technology.

Tuesday, May 1, 2012

Swiss cartoonist Chappatte wins Thomas Nast Award


Swiss cartoonist Patrick Chappatte is the first non-American to be awarded the Thomas Nast Award since its creation over 40 years ago by the Overseas Press Club of America.