Oooooh, busy busy this week.
Local comic con followed by the convention of ISCA- the International Society of Caricature Artists.
Quite the party. I’m exhausted. And behind on deadlines.
Oooooh, busy busy this week.
Local comic con followed by the convention of ISCA- the International Society of Caricature Artists.
Quite the party. I’m exhausted. And behind on deadlines.
Well, it was a perfect storm this weekend, and kept me from getting everything done that needed doing. There was a rock n’ roll fundraiser for a local anthology comic- where I aided by doing caricatures, a sister-in-law moving back into town, a kid getting ready to go off to college for the first time, and a second caricature gig that needed some supplies attention before I could get there, and the first of the NCS members that I officially oversaw review of was on Facebook, so there was some Membership Chair stuff that had to happen as others wanted to know how to put in an application.
It was a long weekend, I tells ya.
Anyhow, above, you see the poster for the Rock N’ Roll thing. I’m still pretty pleased with “Corporette, The Prime Amazon”. That’s funny.
And here, you see the character I illustrated for the Anthology the fundraiser was raising funds for:
It’s gonna be fun. The first meeting I went to at the comic shop, Gabe was the only one sitting there with a finished script. One guy with a ready script didn’t sound like a good sign, but I figured if I was there to do the pages, I needed to work with someone who at least hit the deadline. Gabe wrote Stoned Ninja. Not my usual kind of thing- no humor. On the other hand, who knows? You gotta stretch occasionally. Anyhow the pages look good. Now if everyone else finishes theirs, the book will be ready to roll. I’ll let you know how to get yours.
All of which is to say: “Sorry! Hubris didn’t get finished!”
Anyone who’s had the misfortune of listening to me talk in the last few years knows that I don’t just draw Hubris, or even just Hubris and The Buckets. I do a lot of advertising cartoons and I do (and have done for years) caricatures of various types.
Caricature. Tricky word. My mom still can’t pronounce it, and I was first paid to be a caricaturist nearly thirty three years ago. She tries, though. When I was sixteen, a buddy and I actually used to set up at the entrance of the local WalMart (the manager had the idea that little fair/festival type things every weekend made the shoppers happier. He may have been right.) Once, a fella came in, looked at our table, looked at the sign, looked at the samples and said. “Them’re pretty good. Too bad y’ misspelled ‘character’.” So, if you didn’t know it before now, here’s your word for the day- Caricature.
And don’t misuse it, now that you have it. I have ad agencies call up and tell me they need a caricature. I ask for details, and what they want is a character. Literally, a cartoon character that can be licensed for some client or other. Not the same. If the character needs to have the features of a person or a kind of person, it might be a caricature. If it’s a blue furball that sells cleaning services, it’s a character.
But back to caricatures. Occasionally I get one that’s barely outside the usual request. Mostly, these days, I do the occasional party-style 4 minute caricatures for a few hours, or I do big 16X20 presentation caricatures that require a little paint and a lot of personal reference about the person I’m drawing. The person is usually retiring, or changing jobs, or moving to another town, and the corporation they work for is giving them a little send-off, including a big ol’ cartoon of themselves and the mess that used to fill their offices.
And now comes a Memorial. Kind of a sweet thought, that I would be asked to memorialize a customer’s friend who’s passed on. I hope I did him justice, and I’m not being irreverent by posting it here, but I was very pleased with how it turned out (Though the photo is kinda dark. It lost something when I lightened it, though). It’s not a caricature in the sense that I distorted anything in order to make recognition immediate. In fact, it’s more of a cartoon portrait filled with family and important things from a life.
So, just so you know that there is such a thing- Here’s a serious caricature.
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