Welcome to the July issue of Not Your Usual Caricature
Artist.
I've mentioned Jack Davis and Mort Drucker in a previous
issue devoted to Mad Magazine. And I've heralded the artistry of the Broadway
theater's Al Herschfeld.
Then there's Bruce Stark and Sam Viviano.
Thomas Nast, of course, was the pre-eminent American political cartoonist of the 19th Century, also considered the "Father of the American Cartoon."
Then there's Bruce Stark and Sam Viviano.
Thomas Nast, of course, was the pre-eminent American political cartoonist of the 19th Century, also considered the "Father of the American Cartoon."
One guy whom I've always admired -- uniquely different from
the aforementioned artists (who, of course, are unique unto themselves, as
well...) -- is David Levine (1921-2009).
Levine's pen and ink, cross-hatch style is both
anachronistic and stylishly modern at the same time.
Here are Bill Clinton and Martha Stewart:
Wikipedia's bio on him notes:
The New York
Times described Levine's illustrations as
"macro-headed, somberly expressive, astringently probing and hardly ever
flattering caricatures of intellectuals and athletes, politicians and
potentates" that were "heavy in shadows cast by outsize noses on
enormous, eccentrically shaped heads, and replete with exaggeratedly bad
haircuts, 5 o’clock shadows, ill-conceived mustaches and other grooming foibles
... to make the famous seem peculiar-looking in order to take them down a
peg". The paper commented: "His work was not only witty but serious,
not only biting but deeply informed, and artful in a painterly sense as well as
a literate one."[
Levine drew his most frequent subject, former president Richard Nixon, 66 times, depicting him as, among other things, the Godfather, Captain Queeg, and a fetus.
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While I'm no David Levine...I am, partially, a "David." That's my middle name.
Here are a couple of recent pieces I've produced, both commissioned to acknowledge the achievements of
the respective individual. In this case, a high school graduate with
honors...and a successful businessman with novelty shops throughout South
Carolina's beach communities.
Enjoy the 4th, and we'll see you again the first Tuesday of
next month for another sketchy -- huh? -- installment of Not Your Usual
Caricature Artist.
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