Cartooning - Draftsmen S3E13
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lesson video
Cartooning - Draftsmen S3E13
comments 8 submissions
Ron Kempke
It's pricey now, but a helpful out-of-print book for learning solid drawing is "Draw the Looney Tunes" by Dan Romanelli.
LESSON NOTES

Marshall sits with Stan to chat about the wonderful world of cartooning. They spend time defining what a cartoon is, looking at some of the history and cultural differences behind cartoons and spend time looking at work from some famous cartoon artists. You’ll also hear some of the skills an artist would need to hone in order to be a good cartoonist.

Books and Resources

(some contain affiliate links)

Rugrats

Doug

Cat Dog

Ren and Stimpy

Boundin’ by Bud Luckey

Little Nemo

Mister Magoo

Gerald McBoing-Boing

Mad's Al Jaffee Spews out Snappy Answers to Stupid Questions

The Far Side by Gary Larson

Sergio Aragones’ Mad Marginals

The Marty Feldman Comedy Machine

Krazy Kat by George Herriman

Peanuts by Charles Schulz

Are You My Mother by P.D. Eastman

Go, Dog, Go! By P.D. Eastman

The Big Purple Book by P.D. Eastman

Roadrunner and Coyote (Looney Tunes)

Tom and Jerry

Nu Pogodi (Well, Just You Wait!) (Russian cartoon)

Der Struwwelpeter (Shock-headed Peter)

Garfield

Get Fuzzy

Calvin and Hobbes

Advanced Animation by Preston Blair (out of print)

100 Tuesday Tips by Gris and Norm

The Etherington Brothers

How to Think When You Draw with Lorenzo

The Silver Way by Stephen Silver

Court Jones

Cartooning the Head and Figure by Jack Hamm

Famous Artists School

Humorous Illustration by Nick Meglin

Cartooning, the Art and the Business by Mort Gerberg

Cartooning by Polly Keener

The Naked Cartoonist by Bob Mankoff

Cartooning by Ivan Brunetti

How About Never, Is Never Good For You? By Bob Mankoff

The Cartoonist's Workbook by Robin Hall

Beetle Bailey

The Lexicon of Comicana by Mort Walker

Cartoon physics

Booth by George Booth

Booth Again by George Booth

How to Think When You Write with Robin

Cyanide and Happiness

The Perry Bible Fellowship

Max Grecke

David Garrido

Sanford Greene


Referenced Artists:

Winsor McCay

winsor mccay cartoons

Jay Ward

jay ward rocky and bullwinkle

Don Martin

don martin comic

Sergio Aragones “I Killed Marty Feldman” comic

sergio aragones i killed marty feldman comic

Edward Gorey

edward gorey cartoon

Thoti Haxha

thoti haxha paintings

Cesar Santos

cesar santos rebirth of painting

Terryl Whitlatch

terryl whitlatch illustration

Sandro Cleuzo

sandro cleuzo cartoons

Heinrich Kley

heinrich kley illustration

T.S. Sullivant

ts sullivant cartoon

Harrison Cady

harrison cady cartoon

Eugene Zimmerman

eugene zimmerman cartoons

Max Grecke

max grecke illustrations

David Garrido

david garrido chihiro

Sanford Greene

sanford greene illustrations

Jean Giraud (AKA Moebius)

jean giraud moebius

Harvey Kurtzman

harvey kurtzman

Bill Elder

bill elder cartoon

Matt Groening

matt groening cartoons

Bill Plympton

bill plympton cartoon


COMMENTS
Stan Prokopenko
Marshall and I just did a podcast on cartoons! Find out who are favorite cartoonists are and what valuable lessons you can learn from these skilled artists.
Newest
Vee Sprunki0110
I love Mike Holms cuz he is the cartoonist for Wings of Fire
Tristan Colgate-McFarlane
So so so many, and across such a broad spectrum. You didn't even mention Asterisk (Albert Udurzo), which looks so gorgeous it genuinely put me off superhero comics, which looked crude by comparison. My absolute political cartooning hero is Sir David Low. His "jokes" were just timeless, and his line work and composition is superb. There are also the classic Punch magazine artists like Pont.. Then you have Ralph Steadman, and Gerald Scarfe. For current stuff, Ann Telnaes is just impeccable. I don't think you event mentioned Chuck Jones, perhaps forgivable, but not to mention Maurice Noble's backgounds!
Tristan Colgate-McFarlane
That should have said "Asterix".
Ross Cline
4yr
I love that you have done this episode, and I would love for you to talk more about The comic code authority and Wertham's work to censor comics. I am especially curious because you seem to be sympathetic to Wertham's program to cleanse cartooning. If you could also talk about how Wertham and his crusade led to the rise of the super hero genre and all that has meant for Pop culture that would be great.
@claireh
4yr
I don't have anything to offer on this topic just wanted to say really looking forward to the expressivity and abstraction episode. Thank you for dedicating an episode about cartooning. Would be great if you could include an interview in one of your future episodes with someone who specialises in cartooning to give some instruction advice or simply insight. But if not, all good. Thanks guys
Britton Theurer
Scott McCloud, author of Zot and The Sculptor, has written three important books: Understanding Comics; Reinventing Comics; and for aspiring comics artists, Making Comics. He is brilliant. These books can present the aspiring comics artist with as accurate a picture of the profession as is available. Also the idea that cartooning should ideally be funny runs counter to Pulitzer Prize-winning artist Art Spiegelman (Mause), Persepolis by Marjane Sartrapi, Alan Moore's V for Vendetta, and Neil Gaiman's The Sandman, just to mention a few very different types of serious comics creators. I loved the podcast and the guideposts you folks presented. I just wanted to give this side of the spectrum its due. Not to mention Japanese Manga. If I have missed something you have already covered in another podcast or resource, I apologize. Scott McCloud | Journal http://scottmccloud.com
Christian Schlierkamp
@Marshall Vandruff Wow! This episode was such a blast! I'm from Germany and we had indeed a copy of the "shock-headed-Peter" ("Struwwelpeter") as kids. It was written in 1844 by Heinrich Hoffmann who was a doctor and psychatrist. I don't think we ever thought it was funny...but in an eery way creepy. I grew up mainly on franco belgian Comic book artists who I adore so much. Moebius, Régis Loisel, André Franquin, Peyo, Hergé of course and Uderzo... German Cartoonists I adored were Rolf Kauka and later (after the reunion) the East German Comicbook series "Die Abrafaxe" byLoni Rietschel, today by Jörg Reuter and a small team (it's an ongoing comic book series that is still running since 1976). Thanks for that episode! I could as well spand a lifetime in Comic books.
Ron Kempke
4yr
It's pricey now, but a helpful out-of-print book for learning solid drawing is "Draw the Looney Tunes" by Dan Romanelli.
William Lambooy
My mom finally found this for me on thrift books for my birthday this year!
João Bogo
4yr
Look out, Marshall!
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