Shrewsbury International Cartoon Festival: Dave Brown’s one-man show

Here is our second preview of the one-man cartoon show which will be running at Shrewsbury next month. Dave Brown, cartoonist for the Independent, will be exhibiting work from his Rogues Gallery of art pastiches. Here is a recent example looking at the race between Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama for the Democratic party nomination for the presidency for the United States.
British cartoon talent
March 25, 2008 No Comments
Shrewsbury International Cartoon Festival: Dave Brown’s one-man show

Dave Brown cartoon pastiche of Hell by Hieronymus Bosch as the US Presidential election campaign of 2004.
One of the highlights of this year’s Shrewsbury festival is a one-man show of the work of Dave Brown, editorial cartoonist for the Independent newspaper here in the UK. Dave is well known for his weekly Rogues Gallery feature, which pastiches great works of art and reworks them for current affairs – it’s a sort of painterly version of an internet mash-up. Dave has allowed us to preview some of his work here in the run up to the event.
March 18, 2008 No Comments
PCO Procartoonists – Art or what?
A wonderful Dave Brown cartoon sold recently at a Bonhams auction of the late Tony Banks’ cartoon collection for the handsome price of £8400GBP. This must bring a tear to the eye of the venerable Brown, having seen not a penny of this largesse.
Dave’s artwork is perhaps a paradigm (ah, that much misused word) for cartoon work in general. He’s one of the best cartoonists around, and probably THE most consummate draughtsman of the “Fleet Street” cartoonists, bedecked as he is with garlands and prizes. I have absolutely no doubt the cartoon is worth that amount of money, sold in the company of Reynolds’s and Raeburns in a Bond Street saleroom. But if you tried to sell it in a cartoon gallery, it wouldn’t fetch anywhere near that. And what if it were offered on eBay? I suspect it would have trouble reaching treble figures. Moreover, The Independent would have paid a fraction of the above price for the original published image. It’s all about context, context, context.
A lot of cartoon art produced by nationally published cartoonists is of a very high standard and involves an unusual collection of skills and knowledge – a fact which is well appreciated in most of continental Europe, but not the UK. The problem is that it has a “humour” label, which immediately seems to devalue it in the eyes of the average Brit. Maybe it’s because we all think we’re natural humourists and could rattle a cartoon off in a minute or two, if we wanted to.
I have a feeling the problem’s compounded by the mindset of the average cartoonist (yes, including me). The old journo’s overheard comment that “cartoonists will work for anything” is sadly all too true. So, time to grow some serious art-house egos, develop some social maladjustments (aside from the usual cartoonists’ infelicities like an unhealthy love of jazz or sweaters) and proudly call ourselves artistes, I reckon.
Mine’s an absinthe, s’il vous plaÎt, Henri.
June 24, 2007 No Comments
