Cartoonists’ Plea: Don’t Elect John Edwards
By
Chris Wilson
Let the evolution begin. As presidential candidates jockey for recognition with 21 months to go until Election Day, the editorial cartoonists are poking around for caricatures that fit each contender—or deciding whether some of them are even worth learning to draw. Any editorial cartoonist will tell you that a caricature is never that much about what the person looks like; while an artist might capitalize on some telling imperfection, in the end it’s about how he or she perceives the person. Eventually cartoonists reach a consensus on how a public figure is drawn. Take the President: Over six years, caricatures of George W. Bush have undergone a regression, from man to ape to a stunted sort of prosimian with large ears and beady eyes, at a rate about equal to his decline in popularity. “There is an evolutionary process,” says Matt Davies, the Pulitzer Prize–winning editorial cartoonist for the Journal News in New York state. “It really parallels the basic knowledge of the character of these people.” Davies describes the consensus as giving Bush a small, “arrow-shaped” nose and a big upper lip, neither of which matches Bush’s actual physique. “It’s not a physical thing for me at all,” says Clay Bennett of the Christian Science Monitor, another Pulitzer winner. “The easiest to caricature would be the candidate with whom I agree the least. Cartooning is a reactionary form of journalism, based on negatives more than positives.” Looking ahead to 2008, it’s John Edwards who gives Davies nightmares—and not for political reasons. “He looks like a Ken doll,” Davies says. “We thrive on the grotesque. We root for the ugly guy. I think cartoonists would be mortified if John Edwards becomes president.” Cartoonists have had more practice with the bigger names—Hillary Rodham Clinton and John McCain—but even in those cases most say they are withholding judgment on how the caricatures will evolve. “Sometimes it takes you a little while to capture a person,” Bennett says. When Davies first tries to get a feel for a person on the sketch pad, he says he sometimes lands on an image of someone or something else that reminds him of his subject’s essence. “Al Gore was a person who was difficult to draw. There’s no consensus, in the way there is for Clinton or Bush.” Then for Gore he found his muse: Sam the Eagle from the Muppets. “I thought, that’s who Al Gore is,” he says. “I drew him with that in mind.”
|
|
Honoring local heroes whose good works and generous spirits make Washington a great place to live and work
more
A suicide bomber in Afghanistan killed seven of the CIA’s own, including one of its best terrorist trackers. New details about Jennifer Matthews—and her secretive life—provide an inside look at a bloody and unfinished war.
more
Tevi Troy shares his tale of a career first.
more
A look back on AIDS through the years, from its first report in 1981 to the creation of DC's commission to combat AIDS in 2011
more
The national "open carry" movement, in which gun owners openly—and legally—carry guns in public, began in Virginia a decade ago. Meet three women who aren't bashful about it.
more
Sold for $1, the venerable weekly is about to become one of Tina Brown's media spectacles.
more
For 39 years, The Washingtonian has honored those who bring help and hope to the neediest among us, give at-risk children a fighting chance, enrich our educational and cultural lives, and make Washington a better place for all of us.
more
Prosecutors in DC have the toughest caseload in the country. But working here is also the best training ground for young lawyers—if they can handle the pressure. These are their stories.
more
Woo at the Zoo, the opening of “Genesis Robot” at Synetic Theater, and the Washington DC International Wine & Food Festival.
more
Our recommendations for the best in live music over the next seven days.
more
|