Not exact matches
Remember the
days when places like printing companies and auto body shops posted
cartoons that
showed an employee laughing hysterically, accompanied by a line like, «You want it when?»
There are numerous instances of coarse language by Luther, his Catholic opponents and the pamphleteers of the
day, not to mention the inflammatory woodcuts (the
cartoons of the period) which, for example,
showed a seven - headed Luther.
-LSB-...] same
day, David Hayward reshared an older
cartoon of his, on whether Jesus would be recognized if he
showed up in this or that -LSB-...]
From the»70s, I miss Teaberry gum, Captain Kangaroo (would love for my son to watch him), Thanksgiving
Day parades without Broadway
shows incorporated, BooBerry cereal, 3D baseball cards in my cereal box, politically incorrect James Bonds, politically incorrect anything, Miller Lite commercials (today's are so bad and so anti-men), Snik - Snak candy bars, Hostess Ho - Hos (the way they used to taste), drive - in movie theaters, the Saturday morning
cartoons, Merita breads (including donuts and individual cakes), Sealtest milk and ice cream, bank - track Roller Derby, and oh, I could go on and on.
A
cartoon by Matt in the Telegraph on July 2nd (which would work for almost any
day)
showed two students, one of them saying «I'm studying politics.
My kids favorite
shows these
days vary from
cartoons to movies to sitcoms and nature
shows.
Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles, the colossal juggernaut of toys,
cartoons and movies from the late 80's, is seeing a resurgence in all three forms these
days, thanks to a highly successful Nickelodeon
show and a second movie produced with Michael Bay's typical pyrotechnics.
Also seen the same
day, down the block from Pace Gallery, in the
show at Lennon - Weinberg Gallery, «H.C. Westermann: The Human Condition, Selected Works, 1961 - 1973,» some early drawings by H.C Westermann (1922 - 1981), done (as I overheard the gallerist explaining) when the artist was in the hospital being treated for testicular cancer — which he survived: his wife had brought him some crayons and paper, and he worked on a group of small drawings, some in the artist's characteristic graphic,
cartoon - related style, some in a more abstract and less over-determined mode — after he recovered, these were packed away and never
shown until now.
These
days, you often find Julia Wachtel's art
shown alongside the latest provocations by hot young artists on the art - fair circuit, and her mashup of naive
cartoon imagery with racy or raucous photography — often at large scale — utterly hits the Internet - flattened moment.
Drug paraphernalia, porn stars, and renowned
cartoon characters line the walls of the 6817 gallery in Los Angeles for artist Jesse Edwards» new
show, Lets Watch TV All
Day.
Drawing his inspiration from pop culture and American expressionist painters such as Willem de Kooning, Todd James, often called «master of modern -
day satire» seems to strip down his characters to a
cartoon level
showing them in absurd and meaningful situations as a witty comment to todays society and reality.
Of special note are two concurrent exhibitions, one by the Romanian artist Geta Brătescu, which in its way
shows a variant methodology for combining classicism with
cartooning, deploying humor and a stylized visual wit; and another
showing never - before seen latter -
day works on paper by the iconic Louise Bourgeois.
Duchamp's Nude Descending a Staircase (No. 2)(1912) was considered scandalous and roundly mocked by the media of the
day, such as in a March 1913 Cubist - inspired
cartoon in The Evening Sun newspaper, seen in reproduction in the
show, that depicted «The Rude Descending a Staircase (Rush Hour at the Subway).»
Tracing the evolution of Hancock's vision by
showing the genesis of his mythology, including that of the epic Mound saga, and his wide range of high and low influences (comics, graphic novels,
cartoons, music and film, as well as visual art), this catalogue demonstrates the fundamental, continuing importance of drawing in Hancock's work up to the present
day.
Even on the
day of the massacre in Paris, the CBC journalistic standards and practices director, David Studer instructed all CBC personnel as follows: «many people are arguing that the violent actions in Paris today invite — some would say almost require — others to
show solidarity with Charlie Hebdo by reprinting the offending
cartoons....
Minister Scullion said the publication of Bill Leak's
cartoon today was particularly tasteless, given it was National Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Children's
Day, a day to celebrate and show our support for Indigenous children throughout Austral
Day, a
day to celebrate and show our support for Indigenous children throughout Austral
day to celebrate and
show our support for Indigenous children throughout Australia.