The Cartoonists Part Four

The several page article 'The Cartoonists' appeared in the weekly New Zealand Heritage magazine published in the early 1970's and eventually collected as a set of Encyclopedias.

Read The Cartoonists Part One

Read The Cartoonists Part Two

Read The Cartoonists Part Three

In the conservative newspapers for which they worked Minhinnick fitted naturally, whereas Low was a radical, an oddity who made his own rules. Minhinnick dryly pointed the political difference. "It is often written of a cartoonist that he 'crystallises and reflects the opinions of the common man'. If Low ever did that it was by coincidence. What Low crystallised and reflected were the opinions of David Low, and if the common man or anyone else didn't like it, they could do the other thing."

Gordon Minhinnick

Minhinnick considered Low's cari­catures as being not merely recog­nisable but ludicrously unmistakable —the very essence of the person. Yet he discerned in Low the quintessen­tial imp who would not have cared overmuch had he been wrong, and he quotes Low as saying that the first essential of caricature is that it should be a lark.  Low would have liked that. He wrote in his own introduction to H. R. Westwood's Modern Caricatures: "Satirists who approve beauty and goodness by idealising the persons and policies of their friends do so, of course, at the expense of the satirical essence of their art, and become accordingly dull. Satire can-not live with hero worship, and poetry is no part of the caricaturist's function. However the ethics of satire may be tortured in argument, it is difficult to hold that the satirist has any moral obligation to his fellows but to throw bricks at them."

Nevile Lodge with self portrait at his drawing board

Where then are New Zealand's brick throwers? Minhinnick was one, though he seems to have mellowed with age. In the New Zealand Herald of July 15 1938 he depicted the Prime Minister, M. J. Savage, drinking a glass of State control, while Stalin, Mussolini and Hitler reach out for the bottle at his elbow. The caption is "The Spirit of his Ancestors". In that year, it is safe to assert, at least 60 per cent of Minhinnick's readers must have hated him for that.

By April 15 1969 Minhinnick was drawing — for example — Sir Edmund Hillary in an "Attempt on the North Face of Mt. Muldoon", and his brick is thrown accurately but with markedly less force. Nothing like George Finey's wicked caricature of Gordon Coates has lately been seen. It is as though New Zealand's cartoonists in the end are moulded by their audience—a people who expect cartoons to be funny rather than biting, who set limits well within those imposed by libel laws.

This 1971 Lodge cartoon is typical of the "average" New Zealanders he is most at ease in depicting, those whose primary interests are rugby, racing and beer.

Nevile Lodge (Evening Post) and Eric Heath (Dominion) consider that newspaper readers have become more rather than less sensitive since the flowering of New Zealand cartooning in the 1920s. "I am amazed at how outspoken those men were," Nevile Lodge has said. "We could not get away with it today. Their barbs seemed to be aimed at the character rather than at his ideas or policies."

Noel Francis Rhoden (28 May 1911 - 1968)

Whangarei born cartoonist/illustrator Noel Rhoden was born today in 1911. I've found little about Rhoden's background other than a mention in the Australian Journal, March 1937, of Rhoden's work in poster design and magazine illustration. Rhoden was also the sole illustrator of the second Coles Boy's Book published circa 1950's which included a ten page science fiction comic The Monsters, samples below.

Rhoden was also active as a painter in the 1930's, with records of about forty existing works online.

Source: http://www.austlit.edu.au/austlit/page/A94998?mainTabTemplate=agentWorksBy

Buttercups and Daisies by Avis Acres

Buttercups and Daisies, a children's reader written and illustrated by Avis Acres (26 March 1910 - 15 October 1994). Thyra Avis Mary McNeil, more commonly known as Avis Acres produced The Twinkle Twins and other cartoons for the Auckland Star in her early twenties, samples here. Acres also produced three popular Hutu and Kawa books in the 1950's and Opo The Gay Dolphin published by A. H. & A. W. Reed. Through to the late seventies Acres was also active as a magazine cartoonist, painter, wrote radio scripts, articles and commercial art for various outlets.

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Tonight: Graphic Contents Exhibition

Pic: Katie Parrish

The Graphic Contents exhibition opens tonight with a launch next Tuesday  at 1000 Pound Bend as part of the launch of the Melbourne Emerging Writers Festival.

"Australia’s comics scene is a small but vital one. Come check out our exhibition Graphic Contents Express, running from Tuesday 26 May – Friday 5 June. A literal visual feast, it will showcase work from Lachlan Conn, Mandy Ord, Chris Gooch, Katie Parrish, Josh Santospirito, Nicky Minus, Simon Hanselmann, Jo Waite, Merv Heers, Leigh Rigozzi and more in all its graphic glory.

The exhibition will be launched on Tuesday 2 June with readings by Mandy Ord, Merv Heers, Jo Waite, Leigh Rigozzi and more."

More info on the Emerging Writers Festival Site.