New Yorker cartoonists Matt Diffee and Carolita Johnson, respectively editor of and contributor to the latest Rejection Collection book, were on the radio this morning talking about the book and cartooning generally; you can read more about it on Carolita’s blog, one of my favorite sites on the Thingosphere. Diffee also spoke to NPR in November about all things rejected and collected.
Semi-incidentally, I also notice a Steve Martin interview lurking in the margins there. Nice work, webmasters!
I recently interviewed Diffee at some length myself, for Print, my noble and sassy (it’s true) home base. Want to stick it to the nattering nabobs of new-media naysaying? Buy a beautiful subscription to the magazine whose name sums up everything you love about those words and images you don’t have to squint at onscreen and can even read on the subway without becoming a miniaturist. It’s a fabulous and thoughtful gift, not to mention a steal!
Category Archives: Seal Barks
How Were the Contest Cartoons Captioned Before the Winners Captioned Them?
As usual, Daniel Radosh is on the cutting edge of this question. For Radosh’s site, which provides (thanks to his admirably perverse readers) parallel-universe captions from the smutty to the surreal and everywhere in between, cartoonist and Rejection Collection editor Matt Diffee will be surveying his comrades-in-art and finding out what handwritten line of whimsy went with the original drawing submission that then, later, became a caption-contest challenge. I do know the original caption to Drew Dernavich’s lifeguard cartoon, but I’ll let Radosh do the honors. Speaking of the contest, I just discovered this site full of suggested captions and contest information (Michael Shaw, is this yours? I can’t figure it out!). Speaking of cartoonists, you’ll want to listen to Gahan Wilson and Bob Mankoff chatting about Wilson’s unmonstrous but excellent adventures in life and monster-drawing at the New Yorker website. Speaking of New Yorker cartoons in general, here’s a useful mini-collection of resources about the submission process. And speaking of wit writ large and small, I can’t believe the central Onion HQ is moving to Chicago; I read the paper faithfully in its fledgling years in Madison, my proud and good-humored hometown.
Roz Chast + Steve Martin = Good Scrabulous Words
Without even accounting for triple-word or double-letter scores, rozchast will earn you 22 points, and stevemartin 16. I officially declare them both sanctioned TWL words, and if anyone disputes this, they can answer to me.
Anyway, as I’m sure you know, Roz Chast and Steve Martin did an alphabet book together, and it’s damn funny. What you didn’t know was that there’s a video here at wsj.com in which Chast talks, winsomely and slightly mischievously as usual, about the book (as well as her supremely awesome collection The Party After You Left). I love the idea of these two cooking this up together. You can see Chast and Martin chatting chummily in a video from last year’s New Yorker Festival, and if you’re a genuine Chast completionist, you’ll check out a little chat I had with her not too long ago.
When You’re in the Market For Business Cartoons
You might want to take a look at cartoonist Mark Anderson’s comparison of various business cartoon collections, including The New Yorker‘s. As you might expect, even the non-New Yorker books contain quite a few New Yorker cartoonists. There just isn’t that much single-panel work out there anymore!
Also, while looking for something else, I came across this archive of pieces about James Thurber, and also quite a nice little collection of New Yorker-related photos and factlets, along with audio recordings of some of the writers mentioned.
There’s a Reason These Cartoons Weren’t in The New Yorker
Or is that multiple reasons? Sometimes it’s hilariously obvious; other times, it’s so ineffable and multilayered you could write a dissertation on it. Someone probably is, and I hope that chlorophyll-deprived Ph.D. student will send it to me as soon as he or she has handed it in and fainted away from lack of sleep and sustenance. Anyway, there were Gawker folks at last night’s extremely fun, if nonswimming, pool party for The Rejection Collection Vol. 2: The Cream of the Crap (“More cartoons you’ve never seen, and never will see, in The New Yorker“), and they have nice digital cameras, so I don’t know how much point there is in boldface names. But it was warm (and not just in temperature terms, though it was that, too) and crowded and high-energy and, dare I say it, kind of hip. Nobody there looked a bit rejected.
I recommend both Rejection Collection books, which have—alongside those ineffably or effably rejected cartoons—photos of and highly whimsical, illustrated interviews with the cartoonists you know only from their cryptic signatures, and there’s also a chance to have your copy/ies signed this Wednesday, 7 p.m. at Barnes & Noble on 6th Avenue. Whiz kid and pigeon enthusiast Matt Diffee will be there with cartoonist and moonlighting impresario David Sipress; they’re both funny and friendly guys. Swimsuits encouraged. Transgressions are the order of the day!
Thanksgiving of the Unexpected
My old buddy Tom Gogola (whose awesomely loud and witty band, Blown Woofer, is playing twice this weekend in New York, at Union Hall on the 24th and Mercury Lounge on the 25th—now that’s gravy) asked me to contribute to his paper’s Thanksgiving thanks-bonanza, and I did. Have a nice holiday, safe travels to Martin who’s on his way back over the sea, and see you in a few days.
Later: Hey, the results of Leonard Lopate’s Thanksgiving cartoon contest are now up on the WNYC website, complete with video of Lopate and Bob Mankoff chatting and throwing around a cartoon idea that includes the phrase “totally plucked.” Reads one plaintive comment, “congratz to the winners..really. But does anyone else feel like charlie brown for losing?” Cheer up—you’ve still got a chance in the traditional arena. And this week’s edition has Cartoon Issue-themed red in it; if you win it, you’re certainly no turkey.
To Look Forward To: A Beautiful Steig Cover
This week’s issue has a cover by William Steig in the spare mode of New Yorkers past, and it’s a corker. It appears to be on heavily textured paper, almost wallpaper; the face (it’s called “Face”) is both surreal and perfectly descriptive; and the colors are sublime. I like seeing the Irvin type on the cover situated so crisply and clearly, too. Probably not coincidentally, there’s also a big Steig show at the Jewish Museum in New York, from today through March 16:
Hailed as the “King of Cartoons,” William Steig had a long and acclaimed career as both a brilliant cartoonist and an award-winning, beloved author of children’s literature, including his 1990 picture book Shrek! (“fear” in Yiddish) which has been turned into a series of popular animated films. Born in Brooklyn, New York, on November 14, 1907, to Eastern European Jewish immigrants, Steig grew up in the Bronx and began illustrating for The New Yorker in 1930. His prolific association with the magazine is the longest by far of any of its cartoonists, with over 1,600 drawings as well as over 120 covers published during a period of 73 years. Scheduled for the centennial of the artist’s birth, this exhibition pays tribute to Steig’s incredible creativity by featuring a wide selection of original drawings for both his New Yorker cartoons and his children’s books such as Sylvester and the Magic Pebble, Doctor De Soto, Amos & Boris, Brave Irene, Gorky Rises, Dominic, When Everybody Wore a Hat, and of course Shrek! as well as his less known mid-life “symbolic drawings.” This in-depth presentation also sheds light on Steig’s life as it relates to his work and will be complemented by a range of public and educational programs for both adults and children.
Check out the museum’s online supplements, too, including an essay called “Early Beginnings at The New Yorker” with accompanying cartoons.
Call for Submissions: The Leonard Lopate Show Cartoon Contest
We’re pleased to bring the jocular doodlers among you news of a rare opportunity: Now that cartoon caption contests are all the rage, why not a contest for the cartoons themselves?
WNYC public radio host Leonard Lopate and New Yorker cartoon editor Robert Mankoff had the same thought, and are joining forces to host just such a competition. Naturally, they thought of the readership of Emdashes as a promising source of entrants.
Here are the details: Whip up a cartoon on the subject of Thanksgiving, give it a caption, get it into .jpg or .gif format, and post it to this Flickr group before 12 pm on Wednesday, November 14, 2007. Mankoff will then choose his favorites and discuss them on The Leonard Lopate Show one week later, the day before Thanksgiving, November 21, 2007. (Don’t forget that Thanksgiving is on its earliest possible day this year.)
So bust out your pens, brushes, electronic tablets, crayons, lipsticks, woodcutting equipment, what have you, and do us proud! If the resultant radio segment consists of nothing but Emdashes readers, that’s just fine with us. —Martin Schneider
Covers in the News, and on the Web
The New Yorker‘s September 11, 2006, cover is a finalist for ASME’s 2007 Best Cover Contest. The two-part cover—published on the five-year anniversary of the attacks of September 11—was illustrated by Owen Smith, from a concept by John Mavroudis, and it’s also a winning entry in PRINT‘s brand-new Regional Design Annual (on newsstands any minute now). Buy the issue; it’s also got a piece I wrote about The New Republic‘s recent redesign and What It Means, plus hundreds of beautiful pages of other Regional winners and, of course, many excellent articles you’ll like.
Speaking of my home magazine, we’ve got a Student Cover Competition going on, so go over there and vote! Forty-three years after the magazine’s first such competition, we’ve made it interactive. A swarm of students from around the world designed fantasy PRINT covers, and we’ve got the work of all three finalists on our website: Brandon Maddox, from Valencia Community College, Orlando, Florida; Katty Maurey, from L’Université du Québec à Montréal, Montréal, Canada; and Blaz Porenta, from the University of Ljubljana, Academy of Fine Arts and Design, Ljubljana, Slovenia.
You choose the winner, to be featured in our April 2008 issue; the polls close November 16. Participate in design democracy!
O Caption! My Caption! New Contest Winner David Wood Speaks Out
Our extraordinarily employable intern John Bucher recently sat down with David Wood, whose caption for Alex Gregory’s drawing of a nude briefcase-carrier—“On second thought, it’s more of a sandals dayâ€â€”earned him the blue ribbon in Cartoon Caption Contest #111. Wood, who now teaches English at Northern Michigan University, did his doctorate in Renaissance Studies at Purdue. Like last week’s winner (and the interviewer), David has passed time in the forbidding climes of North America’s extreme northwest.
The winner of last week’s Cartoon Caption Contest was from Alaska—the first in 110 to go to that state. What’s your connection to the place?
I lived up in Fairbanks (a.k.a. Ice Planet Hoth) for some years toward the end of the 20th century, hanging around the University of Alaska Fairbanks, where I picked up my master’s. On the face of this earth, I humbly suggest, and with nothing but love for their creative hearts, that there is nothing more comical than those seriously involved in an MFA program. Harry Shearer (of Best in Show fame) needs to tackle such a thing.
At UAF, there were at least a few kinds of comedy I saw demonstrated brilliantly: the deliberate, piss-in-your-pants sort of funny, and the incidental hilarity that derives from witnessing a dire sense of artistic earnestness. I keep in touch with most of these writers, a number of whom are starting to make waves right now. I left to pursue my doctorate. But if you never truly leave Alaska once you’ve lived there, then it is nigh on impossible to get Fairbanks, a kind of über-Alaska, out of your system; and if Alaska is filled with characters marching to the beat of a different drum, as the saying goes, Fairbanks itself attracts the über-characters. I miss them and Fairbanks dearly.
Okay, “dire sense of artistic earnestness” is too tempting. Change whatever names you need to, but give us an example, will you? Of course, if the earnestness cuts too near the bone, a good pants-pisser will do, too.
Well, I’ll leave their work out of it, then. As for a literal pants-pissing, I recall the time a guy, participating in the reading of another student’s play, drunkenly reeled to the floor of a stage while mid-sentence in front of a crowd of 100 or so. The humor lies in the fact that he had been sitting in a chair and then fallen in a slow-motion sprawl, emitting the faintest of howls as he spread out gradually upon the floor. When he finally got back on his feet, he began to insist belligerently that he had been miscast…
As for earnestness, there was the nature-writer guy who, during a cold snap (lasting a month or so) wore bunny boots (rubbery, white moon-boots that are good to minus-60 degrees or so) and five layers of clothes all day around our 75-degree office. By the end of each day he was just drenched in sweat. After witnessing this guy’s getup for a few weeks, another guy finally looked him in the eye and said: “Congratulations, you live in Alaska. And we live here too, right?”
Your current book manuscript—tentatively titled Very Now: Timing the Subject in English Renaissance Literature—traces the relationship between character emotion and narrative form during that period. Timing, subject, character emotion, narrative form—these all sound applicable to cartoons. What’s your book’s central argument? And is this academic focus a good preparation for cartoon caption-writing?
My academic work involves elucidating the function of time in early modern medical theories and charting the ways that early modern artists like Shakespeare, Sidney, and Milton apply these contemporary views of human health and emotion to their explorations of time in their literary works. Since such representations of time have larger implications involving experimentation with literary structures—why is there a sixteen year gap in the narrative of The Winter’s Tale, after all?—I am basically investigating the embedded relationship between the medical and the literary that these writers take as a given. In short, why did Shakespeare think his characters were going mad and killing one another? More often than not, the answers are different than we, given our own medical paradigm, might assume. And this literature reflects that difference.
Why does this help me write cartoon captions? Your guess is as good as mine.
While on the subject of health: If you were stricken with a mysterious illness, what three books from the English Renaissance would rest beside the recovery bed—your touchstones, as it were? And what three books from the twentieth century?
Touchstone?—a wry As You Like It reference, John. As for the Renaissance, I would need Tottel’s Miscellany, Edmund Spenser’s Faerie Queen, and Shakespeare’s sonnets. As for 20th-century fiction, Graham Swift’s Waterland, Katherine Dunne’s Geek Love, and Raymond Carver’s Where I’m Calling From.
Dismantle your caption for us, the way you might in one of your English classes. What are the most important parts? Why does it work?
At the risk of the old saw that we murder to dissect, I would suggest the following. My caption hints at a past, present, and future for the central character in the cartoon: in other words, the “second thought” in my caption presumes a first. We are to assume he left the house naked a first time, save for his business socks and shoes and, of course, his briefcase. We witness the present and the words he utters to his wife or lady-friend. And we envision a future, in which, still naked and wielding the briefcase, he heads out the door yet again, this time wearing sandals. Situating a character in time in this fashion offers a kind of individuality to him that makes it possible for a reader to identify within him- or herself. Further, we’ve all taken a step out the door and turned back inside due to unforeseen weather or what have you. In this way, the caption is a kind of warped exercise in empathy. But I have to say, I received a hilarious anonymous e-mail from someone the other day who feels that my caption successfully critiques declining public standards of dress for men. So there.
You’re at the university right now—what are you wearing?
As tempting as it might be to say nothing but sandals and a smile, I honestly have to add a rugby shirt and a pair of jeans. Sandals weather doesn’t last too long in Upper Michigan, I’m discovering (much like Fairbanks); you’ve got to make the most of it.
Other Emdashes caption-contest interviews:
- James Montana, winner #109 (“I hate connecting through Roswell.â€)
- Robert Gray, winner #106 (“Have you considered writing this story in the third monkey rather than the first monkey?â€)
- David Kempler, winner #100 (“Don’t tell Noah about the vasectomy.â€)
- David Wilkner, winner #99 (“I’d like to get your arrow count down.â€)
- Richard Hine, winner #98 (“When you’re finished here, Spencer, we’ll need you on the bridge-to-nowhere project.â€)
- Carl Gable, winner #40 (“Hmm. What rhymes with layoffs?â€)
- T.C. Boyle, winner #29 (“And in this section it appears that you have not only alienated voters but actually infected them, too.”)
- Adam Szymkowicz (“Shut up, Bob, everyone knows your parrot’s a clip-on”), winner #27, and cartoonist Drew Dernavich interview each other in three parts: One, Clip-On Parrots and Doppelgangers; Two, Adam and Drew, Pt. Two; Three, Clip-On Parrots’ Revenge
- Evan Butterfield, winner #15 (“Well, it’s a lovely gesture, but I still think we should start seeing other people.”)
- Jan Richardson, winner #8 (“He’s the cutest little thing, and when you get tired of him you just flush him down the toilet.”)
- Roy Futterman, winner #1 (“More important, however, is what I learned about myself.”)
