I’m sure this is all over the web by now, but this truly made me cry.
If you don’t see the video of the Steve Jobs Commencement at Stanford University above, you can try watching it on YouTube.
The Good, the Bad but the not necessarily Ugly.
I’m sure this is all over the web by now, but this truly made me cry.
If you don’t see the video of the Steve Jobs Commencement at Stanford University above, you can try watching it on YouTube.
Take a look at my new Obama sketch.
The old Overland theme I was using for this blog was really pretty, but it didn’t make very good use of the horizontal space. I found it was really meant for a team of bloggers, not one. The way it sectioned posts into categories on the home page, it was difficult to get someone to read all the posts, including ones from other categories. Hopefully this will be an easier read. I like the linear quality of the main page of the blog using the theme.
I found my sketches to the David Patterson piece I did, plus the original creative brief from the editor. Interesting, the article talked about how David Patterson was a young up and coming politician who by virtue of his being a New Yorker and black was either going to be associated with a Liberal Centrist like David Dinkins, or a rabble-rousing black-pride populist like Al Sharpton.
Here were my two sketches I faxed to the editor for consideration, the first one below was on my cover sheet

The one I preferred, but which I thought they would be too scared of using was so much better though, here it is below:
So, of course they chose the safer one, below is the color sketch I did for them, because we thought it was going to be on the cover:
To see the final piece, you’ll have to go back to the original article David Patterson, New York Governor
Procrastination is my middle name. I wanted to do an Obama piece for a while. I was terrified he wouldn’t win throughout the whole night of the election when results started coming in. When he won Pennsylvania by a large margin I started to feel a lot better – McCain and Palin were campaigning on the ground there a lot. That’s also where videos of some of Palin’s rallies I saw came from with the most vile racist, bigotted crowds I have ever seen in a “civilized” blue state. Carvel once said that Pennsylvania was “Philadelphia and Pittsburgh with Alabama in between.” Couldn’t be more true.
Thanks go to Al Jazeera’s English Language Podcast, Rocketboom’s election coverage, Democracy Now’s Podcast, and NPR’s Fresh Air for coverage that CNN, MSNBC and FOX all missed. If you haven’t downloaded their podcasts, you really missed out on some great coverage.
Of course there’s also Steve Brodner‘s “Naked Campaign” for the New Yorker. which was sheer brilliance, I can never get enough of his work. And also Ira Glass’s “This American Life” – I’m glad I was introduced to this.
Soon, soon, Obama will grace these pages.
Real Historic times we’re living in.
This was an original post I had on my previous blog, I don’t remember exactly what I had said, but the gist of it was that in the early 90s I worked at a small community newspaper publisher that distributed free weeklies around the New York City area. At the time I was working in the classifieds, this was still the era of cut and paste and wax machines although a lot of the design and layout was done on the Mac. I created a great little scripted FileMaker Pro Database application that laid out galleys of the weekly classifieds and notified sales of upcoming ads that were due for renewal that saved us a lot of time. I loved that application and used it for many years in the various jobs I had since that one. It was a flat database then, and I’ve not come across it since it went relational.
So back to how I happened to do a David Patterson caricature…
David Patterson, who is currently the sitting Governor of New York State (after Elliot Spitzer was forced out by a sex scandal) was just a West Side State Senator in the late 1990s. The paper I worked at was doing a cover story on his career as a local politician, and the editor asked if I would do a color illustration for the cover. I jumped at the chance and grabbed as many references I could find of him. It was interesting to me that though he was legally blind, he easily could have been mistaken for a sighted person, especially since he didn’t like to cover his eyes, as many blind people are more comfortable doing.
What eventually happened was that the publisher chickened out and decided to pull it from the cover, though it did lead the article on the inside, but in black and white. I was pretty young at the time and I remember being very bitter about the decision. There was talk of being perceived as being racist in the neighborhood that the paper was distributed in, which was to me, a totally lame reason, then why publish it at all? I was perfectly willing to stand up to any criticism and stand by my work, they weren’t though which made me lose a lot of respect for them.
Racist depictions of black people are racist because they are not based on real people or observation, but completely on stereotypes and a lack of any observation or reality. Caricatures are not just “funny drawings” sometimes they can be deadly serious, they can be mean and viscous or sympathetic and poignant, to just label them as “funny” is to belittle their contribution to modern society. They can depict a racist idea or an inclusive one, but the caricature, the depiction of the REAL person in and of itself should not be racist, a good caricature should show the truth about the person being depicted, and the artist him/herself will always inject a certain amount of themselves into the work. There will definitely be more on this topic to come, but for now, let’s just say I was not that happy with how it ended.
Shown in this post is the black and white published version of my drawing and the original color version. at some time in the near future I really should do a Spitzer drawing, his downfall is just begging to be lampooned.
I did a caricature of Howard Stern when he was still in terrestrial (K-Rock in New York) radio, so it’s severely outdated. Since I’m working at Sirius (Sirius XM, Inc. now) this is an appropriate caricature to start this blog off with. It’s in colored chalk pastel on bristol paper, which is a really great medium to work with, very forgiving and you can do work that is very “spontaneous” and free-flowing made up of simple lines, or something heavier like a Degas drawing. I’m more into the lightness of these pastels, over-working the piece is really easy to do and I like to let the tone of the paper do some of the work for me anyway. Adding back white to pastels always feels like cheating to me.
Now if only I could write with lightness too. I do tend to go on and on and on sometimes.
At some stage, I’ll do the “new” post-terrestrial, post-merger, post-marriage Howard, and perhaps some other members of his crew.

One of the best Caricaturists I know… Steve Brodner
Wednesday, October 15th, 2008During the election this year, I wondered what Steve was doing, his biting commentary on the goings on in Washington is always great. I become a little fan-boy around his work, he is JUST THAT GOOD. There some other pretty amazing caricaturists out there, Philip Burke, Hanoch Piven and Bill Pympton come to mind. Steve is currently doing a series of videos for The New Yorker online, that are commentaries on the ’08 election campaigns this year. The videos are directed by Gail Levin, with animation by Asterisk. You can view the videos on the website individually, or subscribe to them via iTunes or XML feed. I did have some problem the feed into iTunes, you may have to massage the files after they download to your drive.
They show Steve in action, doing what he does best. He is so accomplished that he can see these people in his head and can distort them anyway he wants to fit them into a narrative without too much effort. I’ve never seen him work “live” where he starts a drawing and you think it’s one thing, but he’s willing to destroy it to show you another aspect of the campaign from his point of view.
Not everyone’s going to like his work or his views – he is brilliant, scathing and “progressive” would probably be the best description for his political bent. But if you take a look at his New Yorker series (which you can also find on YouTube if they disappear from the New Yorker site) – you can’t walk away without seeing something you haven’t seen before.
In the tradition of Thomas Nast, who was one of his earliest influences, Steve has elevated caricaturing to Art with a capital “A” in my mind. If you’ve ever met Steve, you will also know that he is one of the most passionate, opinionated and nice people you will ever meet – the fanboy in me was thrilled to find the videos.
His personal site is at stevebrodner.com – you should take a look at his other work, looks like he keeps it up-to-date and he also blogs at drawger.com/stevebrodner
Posted in Caricatures | No Responses »
Tags: 2008 Presidential election, artist, Bill Pympton, Caricatures, Hanoch Piven, Philip Burke, political satire, Steve Brodner, Thomas Nast, video commentary