Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Edward Williams Clay (April 17, 1799 – December 31, 1857 [1]) was an American artist, illustrator and political cartoonist. [2] He created the notoriously racist collection of lithographs titled Life in Philadelphia .
This is a list of editorial cartoonists of the past and present sorted by nationality.An editorial cartoonist is an artist, a cartoonist who draws editorial cartoons that contain some level of political or social commentary.
Clay Bennett (born January 20, 1958, in Clinton, South Carolina) is an American editorial cartoonist.His cartoons typically present liberal viewpoints. Currently drawing for the Chattanooga Times Free Press, [1] Bennett is the recipient of the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning.
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
This is a list of cartoonists, visual artists who specialize in drawing cartoons.This list includes only notable cartoonists and is not meant to be exhaustive. Note that the word 'cartoon' only took on its modern sense after its use in Punch magazine in the 1840s - artists working earlier than that are more correctly termed 'caricaturists',
"The View" co-hosts held several interviews with prominent, mostly Democratic politicians and media figures over the last year, including President Biden, Vice President Harris, Gov. Tim Walz ...
Herblock: The Life and Works of the Great Political Cartoonist ed. by Harry Katz (W. W. Norton, 2009), 304pp; prints more than two hundred fifty cartoons in the text; comes with a DVD containing more than 18,000 Herblock cartoons; Herblock's history: political cartoons from the crash to the millennium. Library of Congress, 2000.
A Rake's Progress, Plate 8, 1735, and retouched by William Hogarth in 1763 by adding the Britannia emblem [5] [6]. The pictorial satire has been credited as the precursor to the political cartoons in England: John J. Richetti, in The Cambridge history of English literature, 1660–1780, states that "English graphic satire really begins with Hogarth's Emblematical Print on the South Sea Scheme".