Difference between revisions of "Cartoon" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Image:SubstanceandShadow.jpg|right|400px|thumb|"Cartoon no.1: Substance and Shadow," an illustration by John Leech that satirizes the preparatory cartoons for frescoes in the new Palace of Westminster (1843), and which created the modern meaning of the word "cartoon"]]
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A '''cartoon''' is a form of expression, or [[communication]], that refers to several forms of [[art]], including [[humor]]ous captioned illustrations, satirical political drawings, and animated film. Originally, the term referred to full-scale drawings for various forms of fine art, such as [[fresco painting|frescoes]] and [[tapestry|tapestries]]. From the mid-nineteenth century it acquired the meaning of a pictorial parody, humorous and often satirical in its portrayal of social and political events. Magazines such as ''[[Punch (magazine)|Punch]]'' and ''[[The New Yorker]],'' popularized this visual form of joke, which has continued to be used with great effect on society. Providing the most incisive commentary on matters of current concern, the editorial cartoon in particular has been instrumental in monitoring and impacting the social and political lives of those in positions of power and influence. Animated cartoons cater more to younger audiences, entertaining children with the adventures of anthropomorphized animals, superheroes, and child protagonists.
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{{toc}}
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From fine art to political commentary and entertainment, cartoons have played an important role in shaping the world as we know it.
  
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==History of the Term "Cartoon"==
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[[Image:Leonardo - St. Anne cartoon.jpg|thumb|300px|right|''The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne and Saint John the Baptist,'' a cartoon by [[Leonardo da Vinci]]]]
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In its original meaning, a cartoon (from the [[Italian language|Italian]] ''cartone'', meaning "big paper") is a full-size [[drawing]] made on paper as a full size study for artwork.<ref>Jess Zafarris, [https://uselessetymology.com/2018/01/10/the-etymology-of-cartoon/ The Etymology of “Cartoon”] ''Useless Etymology''. Retrieved January 19, 2023.</ref>  Cartoons were first used during the sixteenth century for [[fresco painting]], a technique involving the application of pigment to a wet lime plaster wall. Once the composition was drawn on paper, it was then transferred to the plaster wall by one of two techniques. The artist might use a tool to trace over the design, indenting the image into the plaster, or a perforating tool might be used, after which [[charcoal]] dust was applied to mark the lines of the composition.
  
A '''cartoon''' is any of several forms of art, with varied meanings that evolved from one to another.
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Cartoons by painters such as [[Raphael]] and [[Leonardo da Vinci]] continue to be displayed proudly in [[museum]]s around the world. A world-renowned collection of cartoons for tapestries by [[Peter Paul Rubens]], one of the most famous artists of the seventeenth century, is displayed in the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Florida.
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{{readout||left|250px|The original meaning of "cartoon" comes from the Italian "cartone," meaning "big paper," and referred to a drawing made on paper as a full size study for artwork}}
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It was not until 1843 that the term "cartoon" was used to refer to anything but preliminary sketches for fine art. The modern use of the term was coined by the British [[magazine]] ''Punch,'' well known for its satirical drawings. At the time, the Houses of Parliament were being rebuilt after a fire, and artists were encouraged to submit preliminary drawings, or cartoons, to help select new paintings and murals. A series of drawings given the title "cartoons" (including John Leech's "Cartoon, No.1: Substance and Shadow") used sarcasm to attack the government's expenditure of money on needless opulence while the poor went hungry. The term "cartoon" stuck as a description of pictorial satire.<ref>[https://illustrationchronicles.com/how-punch-magazine-changed-everything How Punch Magazine Changed Everything] ''Illustration Chronicles''. Retrieved January 19, 2023. </ref> In time, the term came to be used in reference to any form of humorous drawing, and, in the early twentieth century, to animated drawings.
  
==Historical meaning==
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==Editorial Cartoons==
[[Image:Leonardo - St. Anne cartoon.jpg|thumb|200px|right|''[[The Virgin and Child with St. Anne and St. John the Baptist]]'', a cartoon by Leonardo da Vinci]]
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An '''editorial cartoon''', also known as a '''political cartoon''', is an illustration or “comic strip" containing a [[politics|political]] or social message. Editorial cartoons first made an emergence during the [[Protestant Reformation]] in ''Germany'' in the early 1500s. In order to disseminate his ideas to a largely illiterate population, [[Martin Luther]], the leader of the Reformation, turned to the printed image. Images protesting the actions of the powerful [[Catholic Church]] were distributed on broadsheet posters and illustrated [[pamphlet]]s, and proved an effective means of reaching a large portion of the population.<ref>[http://xroads.virginia.edu/~MA96/PUCK/part1.html Part I: A Brief History of Political Cartoons] ''The University of Virginia''. Retrieved January 19, 2023. </ref>
In its original meaning, a cartoon (from the [[Italian language|Italian]] ''cartone'', meaning "big paper") is a full-size [[drawing]] made on [[paper]] as a study for a further artwork, such as a [[painting]] or [[tapestry]]. Cartoons were typically used in the production of [[fresco]]es, to accurately link the component parts of the composition when painted onto [[plaster]] over a series of days. Such cartoons often have pinpricks where the outline of the design has been picked out in the plaster. Cartoons by [[painter]]s such as [[Raphael]] and [[Leonardo da Vinci]] are highly prized in their own right. A world-renowned collection of [[Peter Paul Rubens]] cartoons for huge tapestries is displayed in the collection of the [[John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art]] in [[Sarasota]], Florida.
 
  
==Print media==
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[[File:Benjamin_Franklin_-_Join_or_Die.jpg|thumb|400px|This early political cartoon by [[Benjamin Franklin]] was originally written for the [[French and Indian War]], but was later recycled during the [[Revolutionary War]]]]  
[[Image:SubstanceandShadow.jpg|left|250px|thumb|"Cartoon no.1: Substance and Shadow", an illustration by [[John Leech (caricaturist)|John Leech]] that satirizes the preparatory cartoons for frescoes in the new Palace of Westminster (1843), and which created the modern meaning of the word "cartoon"]]
 
  
In modern print media, a cartoon is an illustration, usually humorous in intent. This usage dates from 1843 when ''[[Punch magazine|Punch]]'' magazine applied the term to satirical drawings in its pages, particularly sketches by John Leech. The first of these parodied the preparatory cartoons for grand historical frescoes in the then-new [[Palace of Westminster]]. The original title for these drawings was ''Mr Punch's pencillings'' and the new title "cartoon" was intended to be ironic, a reference to the self-aggrandising posturing of Westminster politicians.
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In the [[United States]], the first political cartoon was printed by [[Benjamin Franklin]] in ''The Pennsylvania Gazette'' on May 9, 1754. This well known image features a segmented [[snake]], where the segments represent colonial governments, and the caption "Join, or Die" below. Based on the popular [[superstition]] that a severed snake could be made whole again if the pieces were placed together, the cartoon urged colonial governments to unite during the French and Indian War. The image was reprinted by [[newspaper]]s throughout the colonies.<ref>Stephen Hess and Milton Kaplan, ''The Ungentlemanly Art: A History of American Political Cartoons'' (New York, NY: MacMillan, 1975), 52. </ref>
  
Modern [[gag cartoon]]s are found in magazines and newspapers and generally consist of a single drawing with a caption immediately beneath or (less often) a [[speech balloon]].  Many consider ''[[The New Yorker|New Yorker]]'' cartoonist [[Peter Arno]] the father of the modern gag cartoon (as did Arno himself).  Gag cartoonists of note include [[Charles Addams]], [[Gary Larson]], [[Charles Barsotti]], [[Chauncey (Chon) Day|Chon Day]] and [[Mel Calman]].
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The effect of cartoons after the [[American Civil War]] is exemplified in the legendary battle of [[Thomas Nast]]'s ''Harper's Weekly'' cartoons against the corrupt [[William M. Tweed]]. Nast's cartoons, such as “Tammany Tiger Loose” and “Group of Vultures Waiting for the Storm to Blow Over” (both 1871), were virulent attacks on New York's [[Tammany Hall]] political machine led by “Boss” Tweed, who was so exasperated he exclaimed "Stop them damned pictures!" These cartoons were significant factors in Tweed's downfall, and Nast's caricature of the fleeing political boss led to Tweed's identification and arrest in Vigo, Spain, in 1876:
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<blockquote>This confrontation is credited by consensus with establishing once and forever a fledgling craft … as an enduring presence in American political culture. In its telling is exemplified those salient themes dear to the collective scholarship of the medium, such as it is&mdash;the power of the giants of the genre to fuse creative caricature, clever situational transpositions, and honest indignation to arouse the populace and alter for the better the course of human events: the ethical imperative that lifts transitory journalism into transcending art.<ref>Roger A. Fischer, ''Them Damned Pictures: Explorations in American Cartoon Art'' (North Haven, CT: Archon Books, 1996, ISBN 978-0208022981). </ref></blockquote>
  
[[Cartoon#Editorial cartoons|Editorial cartoons]] are a variation of this, found almost exclusively in news publications.  Although they also employ humor, they are more serious in tone, commonly using [[irony]] or [[satire]]. The art usually acts as a visual metaphor to illustrate a point of view on current social and/or political topics.  Editorial cartoons often include speech balloons and, sometimes, multiple panels.  [[Editorial cartoonist]]s of note include [[Herblock]], [[Mike Peters]], [[David Low]] and [[Gerald Scarfe]].
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Modern editorial cartoons can be found in most newspapers, and many radical or minority issue editorial cartoonists also have established a presence on the [[internet]]. Editorial cartoons can be very diverse, but a certain established style exists. Most editorial cartoons use visual metaphors and [[caricature]]s to explain complicated political situations, summing up a current event with a [[humor]]ous or [[emotion]]al picture. Some common visual metaphors are the [[donkey]] and [[elephant]] (symbolizing American political parties), the [[beaver]] (symbolizing [[Canada]]), the [[lion]] (symbolizing [[Great Britain]]), and the [[bear]] (symbolizing [[Russia]]). Although their style, technique, or viewpoints may vary, editorial cartoonists all draw attention to current social and political issues.  
  
[[Comic strip]]s, also known as "strip cartoons" in the United Kingdom, are found daily in newspapers worldwide, and are usually a short series of cartoon illustrations in sequence.  In the [[United States]] they are not as commonly called "cartoons" themselves, but rather "comics" or "funnies".  Nonetheless, the creators of comic strips - as well as [[comic book]]s and [[graphic novel]]s - are referred to as "[[cartoonist]]s". Although humor is the most prevalent subject matter, adventure and drama are also represented in this medium. Noteworthy cartoonists in this sense include [[Charles Schulz]], [[Bill Watterson]], [[Scott Adams]], [[Mort Walker]], [[Steve Bell (cartoonist)|Steve Bell]].
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Political cartoons have been viewed as a narrative form and a [[Pulitzer Prize]] for editorial cartooning was established in 1922. They have been described as "speaking pictures," reflecting their advancement of [[rhetoric]] through visual imagery:
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<blockquote>Because cartoon images condense meaning through metaphor, allusion, and metonymy, they create new worlds of understanding&mdash;a President becomes a tiger (or pussycat), a political campaign is described as a sinking ship, a televangelist sell snake old. … It is the dramatistic creation of such understandings that forms the rhetorical core of many visual images, including political cartoons.<ref>Janis L. Edwards, ''Political Cartoons in the 1988 Presidential Campaign'' (London: Routledge, 1997, ISBN 0815328583). </ref></blockquote>
  
===Editorial cartoons===
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By their very nature, editorial and political cartoons spark controversy. Cartoons have been used to depict a wide range of political, religious, and social viewpoints, and often touch upon topics that may be sensitive. As social critics, these cartoonists work best in times of social unrest and movements towards reform. It is more challenging for them to maintain their critical wit in times of tragedy, uncertainty, or the threat of war, when the tendency is to invoke nationalist sentiment and comfort the public:
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<blockquote>Editorial cartoonists, however, are not supposed to be government propagandists; that is the job of other people. Cartoonists are supposed to keep a jaundiced eye on the democracy and those threatening it, whether the threats come from outside or inside the country.<ref>Chris Lamb, ''Drawn To Extremes: The Use And Abuse Of Editorial Cartoons'' (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0231130660). </ref></blockquote>
  
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While such cartoons can often be a positive influence for change, they can also exacerbate existing tensions. In extreme cases, editorial cartoons have caused world-wide protests and violence, such as the case of the 2005 publication of caricatures of the [[Muslim]] prophet [[Muhammad]] in a [[Denmark|Danish]] newspaper.
  
[[Image:joinordie.png|thumb|300px|This early political cartoon by [[Ben Franklin]] was originally written for the [[French and Indian War]], but was later recycled during the [[Revolutionary War]]]]
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==Gag Cartoons and Comic Strips==
An '''editorial cartoon''', also known as a '''political cartoon''', is an illustration or [[comic strip]] containing a [[politics|political]] or [[social]] message. Editorial cartoons can usually be found on the [[editorial page]] of most newspapers, although a few, like [[Garry Trudeau]]'s [[Doonesbury]] are sometimes found on the regular comics page. In recent years, many radical or minority issue editorial cartoonists who would previously have existed obscurely in the samizdat or not at all have found large audiences on the internet. While not carrying the same legitimacy as corporate newspaper cartoonists, self-editing [[List of editorial cartoonists|online cartoonists]] who do not find themselves subject to the conservative constraints of the newspaper industry have often produced challenging, incisive and acerbic work with great visual innovation. Political cartoons are sometimes published in books.
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Modern "gag cartoons" are found in [[magazine]]s, [[newspaper]]s, and greeting cards, and generally consist of a single drawing with either a caption immediately beneath or a "speech balloon." Well-known gag cartoonists include [[James Thurber]], [[Gary Larson]], and [[Peter Arno]].
  
Editorial cartoons can be very diverse, but there is a certain established style among most of them. Most editorial cartoons use visual metaphors and caricatures to explain complicated political situations, and thus sum up a current event with a humorous or emotional picture. In modern political cartooning a division has started to emerge between two styles of cartooning. The traditional style, involving visual metaphors is described as the 'nasti' style (named after Thomas Nast), and the more text heavy 'alti' style that tells a linear story, usually in comic strip format. Although their style, technique or viewpoints may differ, editorial cartoonists draw attention to important social and political issues.
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"[[Comic strip]]s," also known as "strip cartoons" in the United Kingdom, are found daily on their own page in newspapers worldwide, and are usually a short series of cartoon illustrations in sequence. In the United States they are commonly referred to as "comics" or "funnies." Although [[humor]] is the most prevalent subject matter, adventure and drama are also represented in this medium. Most comic strips are stand-alone, but some are serial in nature, with a story line that is continued daily or weekly. A noteworthy comic strip cartoonist was [[Charles Schulz]] who created the ''Peanuts'' cartoons.
  
They do not do this dispassionately. Although most western editorial cartoonists by necessity occupy the middle political ground, this is by no means true of all cartoonists and there is a spectrum of political commentary in cartoons which runs from the extreme right through the centre to the extreme left. That same spectrum also represents religious ideologies and reactions to them and this can produce work that has a tangible effect on peoples lives. Editorial cartooning has a history of controversy. When it is seen from a sympathetic or even familiar cultural viewpoint, the editorial cartoon functions as critical commentary but just as often the same cartoon can be seen as propaganda by those outside of that culture.
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==Cartoons in Film==
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[[Image:Animhorse.gif|right|thumb|400px|An animated cartoon horse, drawn by rotoscoping from Eadweard Muybridge's nineteenth century photos.]]
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One of the most common modern usages of the phrase "cartoon" refers to animated [[television]], movies, and short films. Although the term can be applied to any animated presentation, it is most often used in reference to programs for children, featuring anthropomorphized animals, superheroes, the adventures of child protagonists, and other similar themes.
  
Over the years, certain common metaphors and symbols have been repeatedly used by many different cartoonists. Examples include the use of Uncle Sam to represent the United States, John Bull, Britannia or a lion to represent the United Kingdom, a beaver to represent Canada, a bear to represent Russia, a dragon to represent China, and so forth.
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[[Winsor McCay]], considered "the father of the animated cartoon," produced a landmark animated cartoon in 1914 titled ''Gertie the Dinosaur.'' This cartoon was the first to feature a character developed specifically for [[animation]], and showed the true potential of the medium. Legendary animation director [[Chuck Jones]] is quoted as saying that "the two most important people in animation are Winsor McCay and [[Walt Disney]], and I'm not sure which should go first."<ref>John Canemaker, ''Winsor McCay, His Life and Art'' (CRC Press, 2018, ISBN 978-1138578869).</ref> Five years later, [[Otto Messmer]] created the world famous ''Felix the Cat,'' who appeared in a series of cartoons.
  
Politicians are sometimes unable to separate themselves from the characters cartoonists create, especially if many cartoonists use similar elements. Richard Nixon and Joe Clark are prime examples of this phenomenon. Many times, a political cartoon makes fun of different thing s that are happening in the world.
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One of the most famous early cartoons, and the first to incorporate synchronized sound, is Walt Disney's ''Steamboat Willie.'' Released in 1928, this was the first feature performance of [[Mickey Mouse]]. Disney went on to create an animation empire, encouraging his animators to portray characters with more realistic movement, and creating breakthrough masterpieces like ''Snow White'' and ''Fantasia.''
  
==Motion pictures==
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In 1930, ''Looney Tunes'' was founded by Disney animators Hugh Harman and Rudy Ising (both of whom left three years later to form the MGM cartoon studio). Directors Tex Avery and Bob Clampett began the cartoon tradition of exaggerated slapstick comedy that has persisted until today. Characters like Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck exemplified not only the talent of individual animators, but also their ability to collaborate in a studio-based, assembly-line type system.<ref>Michael Crandol, [http://www.digitalmediafx.com/Features/animationhistory.html The History of Animation: Advantages and Disadvantages of the Studio System in the Production of an Art Form] ''Digital Media FX''. Retrieved January 19, 2023. </ref> 
  
[[Image:Animhorse.gif|right|thumb|200px|An [[animated cartoon]] horse, drawn by [[rotoscoping]] from  [[Edweard Muybridge]]'s 19th century photos.]]
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Until the late 1940s, cartoons were shown in movie theaters. It was typical for theaters of the day to show two full-length films separated by a cartoon and newsreel; many "golden era" cartoons from the 1930s through the 1950s were originally designed to be seen on the big screen. Once television started to grow in popularity, cartoons began to be produced for the small screen. Disney was one of the first cartoon studios to regularly air cartoons, including them in live action programs like ''The Mickey Mouse Club''.  
Because of the stylistic similarities between comic strips and early animated movies, "cartoon" came to refer to [[animation]], and this is the sense in which "cartoon" is most commonly used today. These are usually shown on [[television]] or in [[movie theater|cinema]]s and are created by showing illustrated images in rapid succession to give the impression of movement.  (In this meaning, the word cartoon is sometimes shortened to ''[[toon]]'', which was popularized by the movie ''[[Who Framed Roger Rabbit]]'').  Although the term can be applied to any animated presentation, it is most often used in reference to programs for children, featuring [[Anthropomorphism|anthropomorphized]] animals, [[superhero]]es, the adventures of child protagonists, and other related genres.  Animated material which does not fit the traditional conventions of mainstream Western animation, such as Japanese [[anime]] are often confused with the definition of cartoons.
 
  
==In science==
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In the 1950s, United Productions of America (UPA), a studio formed by ex-Disney animators, created a simple, less theatrical approach to animation. Instead of natural colors and detailed background, the UPA animators used bold colors, abstract renditions of clouds and trees, and limited movement.  As more cartoons were produced exclusively for television, other animators adopted the time and money saving techniques of the UPA animators.
  
The term "cartoon" is sometimes used in a scientific context to mean a diagram, particularly one that depicts a generalised occurrence rather than a specific example.
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Cartoons continue to have success as full length movies; modern techniques in [[computer animation]] allow the cartoonist to create images that would not be possible with traditional animating processes. Movies like ''Toy Story'' (1995) and ''Finding Nemo'' (2003) are examples of [[computer-generated imagery]], or CGI. The use of CGI technology does not, contrary to what one might believe, mean less work for the animators. ''Toy Story,'' the first completely CGI-animated feature, took four years to complete; the same amount of time it took for Disney animators to complete ''Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs''.
  
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Cartoons have long been the subject of controversy in the areas of merchandising and violence, particularly since the predominant audience of cartoons is children. In the 1980s, cartoons like ''Strawberry Shortcake'' and ''He-Man'' were created around existing products, for which the television programs were little more than extended commercials.
  
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There are also a growing number of adult-themed cartoon shows, usually referred to as "adult cartoons." Certain styles of animation, such as [[Japan]]ese ''[[anime]]'', are not generally referred to as "cartoons."
  
== External links ==
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==Notes==
 
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<references/>
 
 
* [http://www.cartoonstock.com/ CartoonStock database of gag, editorial and historic cartoons]
 
* [http://www.punch.co.uk/ Punch website's history of cartoons]
 
* [http://www.cartoonbank.com ''New Yorker's'' Cartoon Bank]
 
* [http://www.cagle.com/ Daryl Cagle's Professional Cartoonists Index]
 
* [http://www.toonopedia.com Don Markenstein's Toonopedia]
 
* [http://www.bcdb.com/ Big Cartoon Database]
 
* [http://www.goldenagecartoons.com/ Golden Age of Cartoons]
 
* [http://www.cartoonspot.net A free cartoons directory : The Cartoon Spot]
 
* [http://www.toon-cycle.com/ Toon-Cycle: Cartoon community and media resources]
 
* [http://ulin.ru/ Russian animated cartoons and World Day of Animated cartoon]
 
*[http://www.kent.ac.uk/cartoons British Cartoon Archive has a database of over 100,000 editorial cartoons published in the British press]
 
*[http://www.weberberg.de/skool/cartoons.html Using editorial cartoons in the classroom] Sources, analysis, interpretation (mostly English with some German)
 
*[http://www.goldbrickgallery.com/ Goldbrick Gallery: A daily collection of the latest masterstrokes from the sharpest pens in Editorial Cartooning.]
 
  
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==References==
 +
*Canemaker, John. ''Winsor McCay, His Life and Art''. CRC Press, 2018. ISBN 978-1138578869
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*Edwards, Janis L. ''Political Cartoons in the 1988 Presidential Campaign''. London: Routledge, 1997. ISBN 0815328583
 +
*Fischer, Roger A. ''Them Damned Pictures: Explorations in American Cartoon Art''. North Haven, CT: Archon Books, 1996. ISBN 978-0208022981
 +
*Hess, Stephen, and Milton Kaplan. ''The Ungentlemanly Art: A History of American Political Cartoons''. New York, NY: MacMillan, 1975. {{ASIN|B000OLADXE}}
 +
*Lamb, Chris. ''Drawn To Extremes: The Use And Abuse Of Editorial Cartoons''. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0231130660
  
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== External links ==
 +
All links retrieved November 28, 2023.
 +
* [http://www.cartoonspot.net/ The Looney Toons] ''The Cartoon Spot''
 +
* [https://www.bcdb.com/ Big Cartoon Database]
 +
*[https://www.kent.ac.uk/library-it/special-collections/british-cartoon-archive British Cartoon Archive] - database of over 200,000 editorial cartoons published in the British press
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* [https://www.cartoonstock.com/ CartoonStock]
 +
* [https://www.cagle.com/ Daryl Cagle's Professional Cartoonists Index]
 +
* [http://www.toonopedia.com/ Don Markenstein's Toonopedia]
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* [https://cartoonbank.com/ ''New Yorker's'' Cartoon Bank]
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* [https://www.punch.co.uk/ Punch cartoons]
  
 
{{Credit2|Cartoon|86932685|Editorial_cartoon|88615177}}
 
{{Credit2|Cartoon|86932685|Editorial_cartoon|88615177}}

Latest revision as of 00:46, 29 November 2023


"Cartoon no.1: Substance and Shadow," an illustration by John Leech that satirizes the preparatory cartoons for frescoes in the new Palace of Westminster (1843), and which created the modern meaning of the word "cartoon"

A cartoon is a form of expression, or communication, that refers to several forms of art, including humorous captioned illustrations, satirical political drawings, and animated film. Originally, the term referred to full-scale drawings for various forms of fine art, such as frescoes and tapestries. From the mid-nineteenth century it acquired the meaning of a pictorial parody, humorous and often satirical in its portrayal of social and political events. Magazines such as Punch and The New Yorker, popularized this visual form of joke, which has continued to be used with great effect on society. Providing the most incisive commentary on matters of current concern, the editorial cartoon in particular has been instrumental in monitoring and impacting the social and political lives of those in positions of power and influence. Animated cartoons cater more to younger audiences, entertaining children with the adventures of anthropomorphized animals, superheroes, and child protagonists.

From fine art to political commentary and entertainment, cartoons have played an important role in shaping the world as we know it.

History of the Term "Cartoon"

The Virgin and Child with Saint Anne and Saint John the Baptist, a cartoon by Leonardo da Vinci

In its original meaning, a cartoon (from the Italian cartone, meaning "big paper") is a full-size drawing made on paper as a full size study for artwork.[1] Cartoons were first used during the sixteenth century for fresco painting, a technique involving the application of pigment to a wet lime plaster wall. Once the composition was drawn on paper, it was then transferred to the plaster wall by one of two techniques. The artist might use a tool to trace over the design, indenting the image into the plaster, or a perforating tool might be used, after which charcoal dust was applied to mark the lines of the composition.

Cartoons by painters such as Raphael and Leonardo da Vinci continue to be displayed proudly in museums around the world. A world-renowned collection of cartoons for tapestries by Peter Paul Rubens, one of the most famous artists of the seventeenth century, is displayed in the John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art in Sarasota, Florida.

Did you know?
The original meaning of "cartoon" comes from the Italian "cartone," meaning "big paper," and referred to a drawing made on paper as a full size study for artwork

It was not until 1843 that the term "cartoon" was used to refer to anything but preliminary sketches for fine art. The modern use of the term was coined by the British magazine Punch, well known for its satirical drawings. At the time, the Houses of Parliament were being rebuilt after a fire, and artists were encouraged to submit preliminary drawings, or cartoons, to help select new paintings and murals. A series of drawings given the title "cartoons" (including John Leech's "Cartoon, No.1: Substance and Shadow") used sarcasm to attack the government's expenditure of money on needless opulence while the poor went hungry. The term "cartoon" stuck as a description of pictorial satire.[2] In time, the term came to be used in reference to any form of humorous drawing, and, in the early twentieth century, to animated drawings.

Editorial Cartoons

An editorial cartoon, also known as a political cartoon, is an illustration or “comic strip" containing a political or social message. Editorial cartoons first made an emergence during the Protestant Reformation in Germany in the early 1500s. In order to disseminate his ideas to a largely illiterate population, Martin Luther, the leader of the Reformation, turned to the printed image. Images protesting the actions of the powerful Catholic Church were distributed on broadsheet posters and illustrated pamphlets, and proved an effective means of reaching a large portion of the population.[3]

This early political cartoon by Benjamin Franklin was originally written for the French and Indian War, but was later recycled during the Revolutionary War

In the United States, the first political cartoon was printed by Benjamin Franklin in The Pennsylvania Gazette on May 9, 1754. This well known image features a segmented snake, where the segments represent colonial governments, and the caption "Join, or Die" below. Based on the popular superstition that a severed snake could be made whole again if the pieces were placed together, the cartoon urged colonial governments to unite during the French and Indian War. The image was reprinted by newspapers throughout the colonies.[4]

The effect of cartoons after the American Civil War is exemplified in the legendary battle of Thomas Nast's Harper's Weekly cartoons against the corrupt William M. Tweed. Nast's cartoons, such as “Tammany Tiger Loose” and “Group of Vultures Waiting for the Storm to Blow Over” (both 1871), were virulent attacks on New York's Tammany Hall political machine led by “Boss” Tweed, who was so exasperated he exclaimed "Stop them damned pictures!" These cartoons were significant factors in Tweed's downfall, and Nast's caricature of the fleeing political boss led to Tweed's identification and arrest in Vigo, Spain, in 1876:

This confrontation is credited by consensus with establishing once and forever a fledgling craft … as an enduring presence in American political culture. In its telling is exemplified those salient themes dear to the collective scholarship of the medium, such as it is—the power of the giants of the genre to fuse creative caricature, clever situational transpositions, and honest indignation to arouse the populace and alter for the better the course of human events: the ethical imperative that lifts transitory journalism into transcending art.[5]

Modern editorial cartoons can be found in most newspapers, and many radical or minority issue editorial cartoonists also have established a presence on the internet. Editorial cartoons can be very diverse, but a certain established style exists. Most editorial cartoons use visual metaphors and caricatures to explain complicated political situations, summing up a current event with a humorous or emotional picture. Some common visual metaphors are the donkey and elephant (symbolizing American political parties), the beaver (symbolizing Canada), the lion (symbolizing Great Britain), and the bear (symbolizing Russia). Although their style, technique, or viewpoints may vary, editorial cartoonists all draw attention to current social and political issues.

Political cartoons have been viewed as a narrative form and a Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning was established in 1922. They have been described as "speaking pictures," reflecting their advancement of rhetoric through visual imagery:

Because cartoon images condense meaning through metaphor, allusion, and metonymy, they create new worlds of understanding—a President becomes a tiger (or pussycat), a political campaign is described as a sinking ship, a televangelist sell snake old. … It is the dramatistic creation of such understandings that forms the rhetorical core of many visual images, including political cartoons.[6]

By their very nature, editorial and political cartoons spark controversy. Cartoons have been used to depict a wide range of political, religious, and social viewpoints, and often touch upon topics that may be sensitive. As social critics, these cartoonists work best in times of social unrest and movements towards reform. It is more challenging for them to maintain their critical wit in times of tragedy, uncertainty, or the threat of war, when the tendency is to invoke nationalist sentiment and comfort the public:

Editorial cartoonists, however, are not supposed to be government propagandists; that is the job of other people. Cartoonists are supposed to keep a jaundiced eye on the democracy and those threatening it, whether the threats come from outside or inside the country.[7]

While such cartoons can often be a positive influence for change, they can also exacerbate existing tensions. In extreme cases, editorial cartoons have caused world-wide protests and violence, such as the case of the 2005 publication of caricatures of the Muslim prophet Muhammad in a Danish newspaper.

Gag Cartoons and Comic Strips

Modern "gag cartoons" are found in magazines, newspapers, and greeting cards, and generally consist of a single drawing with either a caption immediately beneath or a "speech balloon." Well-known gag cartoonists include James Thurber, Gary Larson, and Peter Arno.

"Comic strips," also known as "strip cartoons" in the United Kingdom, are found daily on their own page in newspapers worldwide, and are usually a short series of cartoon illustrations in sequence. In the United States they are commonly referred to as "comics" or "funnies." Although humor is the most prevalent subject matter, adventure and drama are also represented in this medium. Most comic strips are stand-alone, but some are serial in nature, with a story line that is continued daily or weekly. A noteworthy comic strip cartoonist was Charles Schulz who created the Peanuts cartoons.

Cartoons in Film

An animated cartoon horse, drawn by rotoscoping from Eadweard Muybridge's nineteenth century photos.

One of the most common modern usages of the phrase "cartoon" refers to animated television, movies, and short films. Although the term can be applied to any animated presentation, it is most often used in reference to programs for children, featuring anthropomorphized animals, superheroes, the adventures of child protagonists, and other similar themes.

Winsor McCay, considered "the father of the animated cartoon," produced a landmark animated cartoon in 1914 titled Gertie the Dinosaur. This cartoon was the first to feature a character developed specifically for animation, and showed the true potential of the medium. Legendary animation director Chuck Jones is quoted as saying that "the two most important people in animation are Winsor McCay and Walt Disney, and I'm not sure which should go first."[8] Five years later, Otto Messmer created the world famous Felix the Cat, who appeared in a series of cartoons.

One of the most famous early cartoons, and the first to incorporate synchronized sound, is Walt Disney's Steamboat Willie. Released in 1928, this was the first feature performance of Mickey Mouse. Disney went on to create an animation empire, encouraging his animators to portray characters with more realistic movement, and creating breakthrough masterpieces like Snow White and Fantasia.

In 1930, Looney Tunes was founded by Disney animators Hugh Harman and Rudy Ising (both of whom left three years later to form the MGM cartoon studio). Directors Tex Avery and Bob Clampett began the cartoon tradition of exaggerated slapstick comedy that has persisted until today. Characters like Bugs Bunny and Daffy Duck exemplified not only the talent of individual animators, but also their ability to collaborate in a studio-based, assembly-line type system.[9]

Until the late 1940s, cartoons were shown in movie theaters. It was typical for theaters of the day to show two full-length films separated by a cartoon and newsreel; many "golden era" cartoons from the 1930s through the 1950s were originally designed to be seen on the big screen. Once television started to grow in popularity, cartoons began to be produced for the small screen. Disney was one of the first cartoon studios to regularly air cartoons, including them in live action programs like The Mickey Mouse Club.

In the 1950s, United Productions of America (UPA), a studio formed by ex-Disney animators, created a simple, less theatrical approach to animation. Instead of natural colors and detailed background, the UPA animators used bold colors, abstract renditions of clouds and trees, and limited movement. As more cartoons were produced exclusively for television, other animators adopted the time and money saving techniques of the UPA animators.

Cartoons continue to have success as full length movies; modern techniques in computer animation allow the cartoonist to create images that would not be possible with traditional animating processes. Movies like Toy Story (1995) and Finding Nemo (2003) are examples of computer-generated imagery, or CGI. The use of CGI technology does not, contrary to what one might believe, mean less work for the animators. Toy Story, the first completely CGI-animated feature, took four years to complete; the same amount of time it took for Disney animators to complete Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs.

Cartoons have long been the subject of controversy in the areas of merchandising and violence, particularly since the predominant audience of cartoons is children. In the 1980s, cartoons like Strawberry Shortcake and He-Man were created around existing products, for which the television programs were little more than extended commercials.

There are also a growing number of adult-themed cartoon shows, usually referred to as "adult cartoons." Certain styles of animation, such as Japanese anime, are not generally referred to as "cartoons."

Notes

  1. Jess Zafarris, The Etymology of “Cartoon” Useless Etymology. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  2. How Punch Magazine Changed Everything Illustration Chronicles. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  3. Part I: A Brief History of Political Cartoons The University of Virginia. Retrieved January 19, 2023.
  4. Stephen Hess and Milton Kaplan, The Ungentlemanly Art: A History of American Political Cartoons (New York, NY: MacMillan, 1975), 52.
  5. Roger A. Fischer, Them Damned Pictures: Explorations in American Cartoon Art (North Haven, CT: Archon Books, 1996, ISBN 978-0208022981).
  6. Janis L. Edwards, Political Cartoons in the 1988 Presidential Campaign (London: Routledge, 1997, ISBN 0815328583).
  7. Chris Lamb, Drawn To Extremes: The Use And Abuse Of Editorial Cartoons (New York: Columbia University Press, 2004, ISBN 978-0231130660).
  8. John Canemaker, Winsor McCay, His Life and Art (CRC Press, 2018, ISBN 978-1138578869).
  9. Michael Crandol, The History of Animation: Advantages and Disadvantages of the Studio System in the Production of an Art Form Digital Media FX. Retrieved January 19, 2023.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Canemaker, John. Winsor McCay, His Life and Art. CRC Press, 2018. ISBN 978-1138578869
  • Edwards, Janis L. Political Cartoons in the 1988 Presidential Campaign. London: Routledge, 1997. ISBN 0815328583
  • Fischer, Roger A. Them Damned Pictures: Explorations in American Cartoon Art. North Haven, CT: Archon Books, 1996. ISBN 978-0208022981
  • Hess, Stephen, and Milton Kaplan. The Ungentlemanly Art: A History of American Political Cartoons. New York, NY: MacMillan, 1975. ASIN B000OLADXE
  • Lamb, Chris. Drawn To Extremes: The Use And Abuse Of Editorial Cartoons. New York, NY: Columbia University Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0231130660

External links

All links retrieved November 28, 2023.

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