Rejected New Yorker Cover of The Week One of the best there is, John Cuneo, recently posted this rejected New Yorker cover submission. See more of Mr. Cuneo’s work on Instagram; see his published New Yorker cover art here. — My thanks to John Cuneo for allowing me to Spill it. _____________________________________________________________ The Halloween Dailies (Shouts & Cartoon) Shouts: Ali
Read moreTag: Ali Fitzgerald
The Weekend Spill: Donnelly & Thurber’s Influence; A Thurber Event At The Society Of Illustrators; The Tilley Watch Online; Interview Of Interest: Seth; Chris Ware In Conversation With Chip Kidd
Donnelly & Thurber’s Influence From The Cleveland Plain Dealer (cleveland.com), September 1, 2019, “James Thurber continues to influence today’s cartoonists” — this piece by Marilyn Greenwald ___________________________________________ A Thurber Anniversary Event At The Society Of Illustrators From The Society Of Illustrators, this notice of a Thurber event this coming October. Coinciding with the 125th birthday celebration publication of Collected Fables
Read moreToday’s Daily Cartoonist & Cartoon; Bob Eckstein’s Writer’s Digest Conference Graphic Account; Today’s Daily Shouts…And Yesterday’s
Today’s Daily Cartoonist & Cartoon: Teresa Burns Parkhurst on empty-nesting. Ms. Parkhurst has been contributing to The New Yorker since 2017. See more of her work here. _______________________________________________ A Graphic Account Of Interest By Bob Eckstein Mr. Eckstein (aka the World’s Leading Snowman Expert) has graphically captured the recent Writer’s Digest Annual Conference in NYC. See it all here
Read moreThe Weekend Spill; A Smaller Daily Shouts; A Playboy Cartoon; The Tilley Watch Online, The Week Of July 29 – August 3, 2019
A Smaller Daily Shouts: “Course Of Empire: Part 5” — Ms. Smaller has been contributing to The New Yorker since 1996. Further reading from The New Yorker‘s Cartoon Bank blog and from Jane Mattimoe’s A Case For Pencils. _________________________________________________ A Playboy Cartoon Not too very long ago — fifteen years? — if you asked a cartoonist to name the
Read more