Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Pages in category "South African comic strips" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. D. Ditwits; J.
The 2014 Reader's Den Free Comic Book Day event saw the launch of 15 new South African comic books, with some creators traveling from different parts of South Africa for the event. [5] The Reader's Den Free Comic Book Day event was replaced in 2016 with FanCon Cape Town Comic Con, an international comics convention that is held annually in April.
Madam & Eve is a daily comic strip originating in South Africa.The strip, by Stephen Francis and Rico Schacherl, is syndicated in 13 publications and claims a daily readership of over 4 million people. [1]
South African comic strips (5 P) W. South African webcomics (2 P) Pages in category "South African comics" The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
South African comic strip cartoonists (3 P) South African comics artists (1 C, 5 P) E. South African editorial cartoonists (7 P) Pages in category "South African ...
Supa Strikas was founded by Andrew Smith, Oliver Power, Lee Hartman, and Alex Kramer [2] [3] Supa Strikas was originally created by a South African company but that relationship only lasted a few months. After it was bought by a South-African company, it became, like all successful comics, an exercise in making money out of fandomRoy of the Rovers.
In 2010, Zapiro’s cartoons were featured in South African journalist Alexander Parker’s book, 50 People Who Stuffed Up South Africa, about people who had contributed most to the ruination of the country’s government, culture, politics and daily life. His illustrations continued to be featured in three more books published in the series ...
Thomas Ochse Honiball (1905–1990) was a well known South African cartoonist. T.O. Honiball (as he was commonly referred to) was born on 7 December 1905 in Cradock, Cape Colony. Honiball attended the well known high school for boys in Stellenbosch, Paul Roos Gymnasium. He originally studied architecture at the University of Cape Town.