LEA Robert

LEA Robert

Born 1951 in Montréal.

He was educated as a visual artist and worked in graphic design. He began trying to break into cartooning, but it was only in 1992, when he moved to Moncton and began to self-syndicate his cartoons to newspapers. Norbert Cunningham an editor at the Moncton Times Transcript purchased a number of his cartoons which Peter Simpson an editor of the Saint John Telegraph Journal saw and hired him as a regular contributor in September 1995. Since then he has worked as a freelance cartoonist and illustrator.

WORK:

CARTOONIST:

BOOK GRAPHIC ANTHOLOGY:

Content cartoon editorial:

Portfoolio 12: The Year’s Best Canadian Editorial Cartoons. Ed., Guy Badeaux . Writ., Ken MacQueen. Macmillan of Canada, 1996.

Portfoolio …. The Year’s Best Canadian Editorial Cartoons. Ed., Guy Badeaux . Writ., Jay Stone Macmillan of Canada, …
13, 1997. 14, 1998. 16, 2000.

SOURCE:

Article book:

Portfoolio 12: The Year’s Best Canadian Editorial Cartoons.1996: “Robert Lea”: 150.

Portfoolio 16: The Year’s Best Canadian Editorial Cartoons. 2000: “Robert Lea”: 154.

LE MESSURIER Ernest

LE MESSURIER Ernest

Born 1894 in Hamilton, but moved to Vancouver as a child.

Until 1920, he worked for the Daily Province [Vancouver] as a sports and editorial cartoonist. He moved back to central Canada and worked for the Telegram [Toronto], the Star [Montréal], The New York Journal, and the New York Sun.

He died in 1932 in Montréal.

SOURCE:

Book text:

The Hecklers. Writ. & Ed.., Peter Desbarates & Terry Mosher. McClelland & Stewart Ltd., 1979: 242.

 

GRAND CHEF PIERRE

LE GRAND CHEF PIERRE 

A cartoon strip created by Brian Fray. It ran at least from 3 October 1981 to 24 September 1983. It appeared in at least the Toronto Star and the Winnipeg Free Press. A line of merchandise was brought out using this image.

MERCHANDISE:

Card Christmas:

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE CARTOON\IMAGE CARTOON G\IMG_1373.JPG

Plaque:

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE CARTOON\IMAGE CARTOON G\IMG_1375.JPG

Book for recipes:

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE CARTOON\IMAGE CARTOON G\IMG_1364.JPG

Mugs & Holder:

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE CARTOON\IMAGE CARTOON G\IMG_1361.JPG

Flan dish:

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE CARTOON\IMAGE CARTOON G\IMG_1365.JPG

GALLERY:

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE CARTOON\IMAGE CARTOON G\GRAND CHEF PIERRE [LE], Winnipeg Free Press, 10 Oct 1981, 5.jpg Winnipeg Free Press, 10 October 1981: 5

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE CARTOON\IMAGE CARTOON G\GRAND CHEF PIERRE [LE], Tor Star, 29 Oct 1982, D10.jpg Toronto Star, 29 October 1982: D10.

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE CARTOON\IMAGE CARTOON G\GRAND CHEF PIERRE [LE], Tor Star, 18 Sept 1983.jpg Toronto Star, 18 September 1983.

 

LAZARE Gerald

LAZARE Gerald

LAZARE Gerald                                                     SELF PORTRAIT

“The reason I like it [comic book art] is because as a kid I could act out my fantasies and feelings through a strip. I could write the kind of adventure story I might hear on the radio. I’ve always loved mystery stories and I’ve always loved books like Treasure Island. To be able to draw and write for other people was something I got a terrific kick out of. I didn’t know it at the time, but I was obviously mad to draw well. I always admired people who could draw a figure beautifully. That’s really my main goal. If I hadn’t been picked up by Bell, I Probably would have gone to art school to learn how to draw in the traditional sense.”                                                                                                        

Jerry Lazare was born September 25, 1927 in Toronto.

Lazare’s love with the visual arts began very early in life about four or five years old. After watching his older half brother drawing from the Saturday comic section he began to try his hand at putting marks on paper. Another big factor was “…something that wasn’t visual”: radio. From about the age of nine or ten until he entered high school he spent a lot of time sitting and sketching while he listened to radio programs like the “The Shadow”, “Sam Spade” or “I Love a Mystery”. “So, I used to sit and things I heard on the radio I would try and draw.”

In high school Lazare read comics and through them he encountered his first important influence Alex Raymond [“Flash Gordon”]. He was fascinated by the work of Raymond, “… primarily because I thought he was a great draughtsman. The comics that were funny or the people who didn’t draw well …didn’t interest me.” Interestingly, Milton Caniff never appealed to him.

When Lazare was in grade 11 in high school, Canadian comics were just coming on the market and He saw a Bell Features comic. He sent some pencil drawings into the company and about a week later got a call from Cy Bell asking him if he wanted to do a strip. Jerry was stunned he had sent the drawings in looking for criticism – what they thought of them. He remembered being “…very nervous full and of humility. I was just amazed that anyone would wanted to buy the stuff.” Adrian Dingle in a 1973 interview commented: “We had a lot of young kids coming down who didn’t stand a Chinaman’s chance. And they’d be bringing stuff in and then occasionally one had a spark and we’d cultivate that spark.” “Jerry Lazare, for instance, was quite young. And he, of course, has become a first rate illustrator.” Jerry went down to see Cy and Cy asked him if he wanted to take over “Jeff Waring”. Murray Karn the previous cartoonist had gone into the military. Jerry accepted and tried to do the strip in the evenings and on weekends but his school grades deteriorated. His parents talked with the principal and he suggested technical school. Jerry transferred but did not stay very long. Finally he wound up working full time for Bell teaching himself to draw through copying from Alex Raymond strips.

This copying should be clarified. Gerry would study Milton’s strips and then try to emulate them much as an art student will sit in a gallery and attempt to emulate the techniques in the pictures by the masters on the wall.

Lazare’s favourite strips that he worked on were “The Dreamer”, a take off on Morpheus and sleep thing and ‘Drummy Young’ a strip he did because he loved jazz. Another strip he created was “Wing”. Contrary to most of the cartoonists, he never did war strips. Indeed war entered his strips because war was a part of the life of Canadians. His work method was to write out a rough plot for his story Then he’d do the story page by page copying Alex Raymond art and thinking of what the characters would say in the balloons as he went along. He always “got a kick” out of the writing always looking for new ideas; always trying to figure out plots.

He and Fred Kelly who was much older became friends and collaborated on stories. They would get together and talk about what they were doing and bounce ideas off each other. They rented a studio on Yonge Street above the Capitol Theatre. It was Gerry’s first move away from the family home at 17 or 18 years of age.

Lazare remembered one of the significant events for him as a artist occurred while he was working at Bell. “I remember one of the turning points for me came when I was still swiping Raymond’s work … one day I took my stuff in and Dingle said ‘You ought to quit doing this. You’re swiping his stuff!’ I went away and thought, ‘You know he’s right.’ So I just put aside all of the Raymond strips and I tried to do it on my own. … After that session with Dingle I just stopped [swiping] completely. I think the next time I brought a strip in Dingle was absolutely shocked at the quality because it just went right down. I had a very hard time after I decided to stop swiping and from that point on I just did everything out of my head. However, I discovered when I got into illustration that you don’t do that – you use models or reference.” In spite of the fact that Gerry thought the quality of his work had plummeted. His work was never returned to him for corrections: something that happened to other artists of the Bell stable.

In a 1973 interview Lazare commented on his development as a artist during the Bell years. Of his early efforts, “ I didn’t think very much of my work at all. I didn’t really like it until very late on when I felt something coming. Then I started to to get pride in my work. But that only happened near the end.”… “One of the last strips I did was a colour one called ‘Master Key’. I think I did just one or two before it folded. At that point I thought I was drawing better than I ever had.”

On further questioning in 2011, Gerald admitted that “I feel now my ability to write well and letter and dramatize the scene with strong blacks even though the anatomy was wanting was impressive and better than most.”

“They had a party when The Great Canadian Comic Books hardcover was released at Peter Martin’s place. There was one ‘Air Woman’ page – they had a whole mock display with curtains that they drew back. And this was the first time I had seen things that I couldn’t remember ever doing. These were so far back that it was like looking at another person’s work, so I was very objective. A friend of mine was there and he thought the ‘Air Woman’ was great – the best one there. I tried looking at it objectively; it was easy and I felt differently. I felt, ‘It’s not bad for sixteen or seventeen.” I teach and if I have a student who can do black and white that well, I’d think it wasn’t bad at all. But [back] then, I thought it was terrible. In retrospect it’s not bad.”

As Bell Features was entering its twilight period Gerry’s focus was shifting to illustration. Instead of looking at cartoon strip artists for inspiration he turned to magazine illustrators. He discovered the degree to which these illustrators inspired cartoonists. He found that Raymond’s influences were Matt and Benton Clark. He considered Noel Sickles a fantastic illustrator. In Lazare’s opinion Sickles who became an important illustrator for major magazines like Saturday Evening Post was the one who got Milton Caniff started and whose style Caniff followed,. He was particularly drawn to Albert Dorne, “who really had a very good black and white style that would have fitted the comics beautifully” but who had never done comics at all.”

After Bell Features closed its doors Gerry went to New York looking for work in cartooning but found the work conditions distasteful. “The atmosphere looked pretty hack when I went down there. The artists were all lined up in one big room like a bullpen. I had been used to working on my own – writing it and drawing it, doing the whole bit myself. There I would have just been doing penciling or inking. It just didn’t look that thrilling to me ….” Furthermore, he found out that he could be drafted into the U.S. Army which he did not want.

He returned to Toronto and applied for a job at Bomac Engravers an art studio on 246 Richmond Street. In 1949 it was the place to be. “They had the best illustrators in town working there…”. He recalled his reception, “… as soon as they saw my comic samples they said, ‘You’re drawing isn’t bad, but you’re going to have to get that comic art stuff out of your blood. That’s terrible.’…” He started as an apprentice illustrator at $25 a week, quite a descent from the $90 a week he had been making at Bell.

He had to change his whole approach. He learned to work in different mediums: watercolour, gouache and acrylic and acquired a knowledge of colour and its effects. In spite of the interviewer’s comments about his cartoon work, Gerry thought that Bell Features had given him a head start in black and white illustration. “As an apprentice illustrator you get a lot of black and white work and I knew how to spot blacks and I had a feeling for using a pen and brush.” Gerry spent three years at Bomac working his way up to senior illustrator and earning $150 to $200 a week. By that time he was doing advertising illustrations in newspapers and magazines plus some posters for the accounts such as the Ford Motor Co., insurance companies and supermarkets.

Over this period Gerry went to New York each summer to see art shows and meet artists. He became the first Canadian to take Albert Dorne’s Famous Artist Course. It was a correspondence course which instructed students throughout the world. He and Dorne and became good friends and he helped Dorne to bring the Famous Artist course to Canada. The first article about his work appeared in their alumni magazine.

In 1953 he married, left Bomac and went to Europe to study. He worked as an illustrator for Carlton Studios in London. He had an American style of illustration and it was much in demand in England.

Late in 1954 he returned to Bomac where he stayed for a year. He then left and became a freelancer so that he could eliminate advertising work and devote himself to illustrating fiction in magazines and books. The 1950’s were a golden age for magazines and there was plenty of work in book illustrations as well.

From 1956 to 1973 he freelanced as a figurative illustrator for major publishers, both book and magazine in Canada and the U.S.A.

He joined the faculty of the Ontario College of Art in 1966 and taught painting and portraiture in the Fine Arts and Communications and Design Departments two days a week until 1990. He avoided full time and turned down an offer to be chairman of the Fine Arts Department so that they would not interfere with his painting. In the 1971 /1972 study year he taught Advanced Painting at Humber College. He was Artist in Residence in the Ottawa Separate School System (1971), and lectured on art in Ottawa and Peterborough Teacher’s College (1971 – 1972), George Brown College (Painting and Illustration 1971 – 1973),

From 1970 to 1973 he added to a busy teaching and commissions schedule work as a historical painter for the Provincial and Federal governments in Ontario and Quebec.

In 1975 he turned to painting exclusively contemporary life, urban themes and portraiture.

In 1975 he became divorced partly as a result of his decision to depend entirely on his work as a painter for his income. In 1976 he married Setsuko who was also a fine arts painter.

He taught and acted as the co-ordinator of the Ontario College of Art off-campus program in Florence Italy in 1981 – 1982 and in 1989 – 1990.He continued to paint in Italy and France and his one-man show, “Lazare in Europe” was a critical and financial success.

His work is in the collections of: Confederation Life, Bank of Montreal, Imperial Oil Company, The Hudson’s Bay Co., Mary Kay Cosmetics, B.M.I. Canada Ltd., Cambridge Leaseholds, City of Toronto Archives and Metro Toronto Library.

WORK:

CARTOONIST:

PERIODICAL GRAPHIC ANTHOLOGY:                                                                          All published by Bell Features & Publishing Ltd.

Content serial:

Active Comics, 28, no date: “The Dreamer”: 37-43. Black & white.

Wow Comics, no date: “Jeff Waring.” Black & white.
19: 13-18. 22: 14-20. 24: 24-30. 27: 32-38. 28: 37-43.

“The Wing.” Active Comics, 28, no date: 10-15. Black & white.

ILLUSTRATOR:

BOOK TEXT:

Content history:

Canada’s First Bank. Writ., Merrill Denison. McClelland & Stewart, 1966. Painting: “Benjamin Holmes Addresses The Assembly”: 375. Part of a group of artists: Lorne Bouchard, Douglas Johnson, Bruce Johnson, Will Davies, William Kurelek, Henry Simpkins, Stuart Main, Gerald L. Sevier, Roy Hewitson , James Walker, Jack Tremblay, Fred Oakley, Franklin Arbuckle, Alex Taylor, Tom McNeely, Lewis Parker, Huntley Brown, commissioned for this work.

Content novel:

Home From Far, Writ., Jean Little. Little Brown & Co., 1965.

PERIODICAL TEXT & GRAPHIC ANTHOLOGY:

Cover front:

Now and Then Times, 1-2, 1973:

PAINTER:

CATALOGUE, EXHIBIT:

GERALD LAZARE, Paintings and Drawings, January 10 to February 1 1979, Prince Arthur Galleries.

LAZARE IN EUROPE, A Visual Diary, April 9 to April 28 1981, Prince Arthur Galleries,

GERALD LAZARE, Painting the City: A Retrospective, February 29 to April 26 1992, The Market Gallery of the City of Toronto Archives.

EXHIBITS ART:

1964, Toronto, Canadian Book Illustrators Exhibition, Toronto Central Library, Group Show.

1966, Toronto, Canadian Illustrators Show, Toronto Education Building, Group Show.

1970, Toronto, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education, Show with Lewis Parker.

1971, Toronto, Arts and Letters Club, Show with Lewis Parker.

1976, Ottawa, Dominion Corinth Gallery, Show with Peter Corbett.

1976, Toronto, Nancy Poole Gallery, Solo show.

1976, Toronto, Ontario Society of Artists Annual Exhibition,Group Show.

1977, Toronto, Nancy Poole Gallery, Group Show.

1977, Toronto, Nancy Poole Gallery, Solo Show.

1978, Toronto, Gallery 76, Ontario College of Art Fine Arts Faculty Exhibition, Group Show.

1979, Toronto, Prince Arthur Gallery Solo show.

1981, Toronto, Prince Arthur Gallery Solo show.

1983, Toronto, Canadians in Italy, Simpson’s Avon Galleries, Group Show.

1985, Toronto, Yaneff Gallery, Solo show.

1985, Toronto, Market Gallery City of Toronto, “Interiors-Exteriors”, Group Show.

1987, Toronto, Market Gallery City of Toronto, “Window on Toronto”, Group Show.

1987, St. John’s Newfoundland, Memorial University Gallery, “Painting of People”, Group Show.

1988, Seoul, Korea,: Official Seoul Olympics, Watercolour Exhibition, Group Show (representing

Canada).

1988, Toronto, York Quay, DuMaurier Council For the Arts, “Images of Jazz”, Group Show.

1990, Seoul Korea, International Seoul Watercolour Exhibition, Group Show (representing Canada).

1991, Toronto, Okeefe Centre, Canadian Opera Company Benefit Show, Group Show.

1992, Toronto, Market Gallery of City of Toronto, Solo show (retrospective).

1994, Seoul Korea, Korean Oil Painting Society International Exhibition, Group Show.

1994, New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Salmagundi Club, Group Show.

1995, New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Salmagundi Club, Group Show.

1995, New Jersey, U.S.A., Wyckoff Gallery, Group Show.

1996, New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Salmagundi Club, Group Show.

1996, New Jersey, U.S.A., Wyckoff Gallery, Group Show.

1996, New Jersey, U.S.A., Wyckoff Gallery, Solo show.

1997, New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Salmagundi Club, Group Show.

1997, New Jersey, U.S.A., Wyckoff Gallery, Group Show.

1998, New Jersey, U.S.A., Wyckoff Gallery, Group Show.

1998, New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Salmagundi Club, Group Show.

1998, East Hanover New Jersey U.S.A., Nabisco Corporate Center, Group Show.

1999, New Jersey, U.S.A., Wyckoff Gallery, Group Show.

1999, Toronto, Gallery Gevik, Solo show.

1999,New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Group Show: Salmagundi Club.

2000,New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Group Show: Salmagundi Club.

2001,New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Group Show: Salmagundi Club.

2002,New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Group Show: Salmagundi Club.

2002, Toronto, Gallery Gevik, Solo show.

2003,New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Group Show: Salmagundi Club

2004,New York, N.Y. U.S.A., Group Show: Salmagundi Club,..

2004, Dufferin County, Dufferin County Museum, “Huron Series”, Show with Lewis Parker.

2005, Toronto, Propeller Centre For the Arts, Panels, “Paintings & Other Pursuits” Group Show.

COLLECTIONS & COMMISSIONS:

Confederation Life, Toronto City of Toronto Collection

Bank of Montreal, Montreal Imperial Oil Collection

Metropolitan Library, Toronto Province of Ontario, Midland

B.M.I. Canada Ltd., Toronto Museum of Civilization, Hull, Quebec

Maclean Hunter, Toronto Cartier Museum, Québec City

Warner Brothers Pictures, New York Museum of Peel, Brampton, Ontario

Mary Kay Collection, Toronto McClelland and Stewart, Toronto

Smithsonian Museum, Washington D.C. Hudson’s Bay Company, Toronto

University of Toronto Katz Collection Private collections

AWARDS & HONOURS:

1966, Illustration: Best Children’s Book of the Year, Queeny Peavy, USA.

1992, Retrospective mounted by the City of Toronto, “Gerald Lazare Painting the City” official opening

By Mayor The Honourable June Rowlands.

1994, Newington Award for best painting in the show any medium The American Artists Professional

League 66th Grand National Exhibition New York.

1995, Lifetime Achievement Award winner, The Canadian Association of Photographers and Illustrators in Communications.

1996, Award for Excellence in Portraiture, The Salmagundi Club, AAPL, New York.

1998, The Claude Parsons Memorial Award, AAPL, New York.

2001, The Colonel George Morales Memorial Award, AAPL, New York.

2007, Joe Shuster Hall of Fame induction, Toronto.

SOURCE:

Book:

East meets West, the art of Gerald & Setsuko Lazare, LAZARE Gerald & Setsuko, Abicello Press, 2008.

GERALD LAZARE, Paintings and Drawings, January 10 to February 1 1979, Prince Arthur Galleries,

LAZARE IN EUROPE, A Visual Diary, April 9 to April 28 1981, Prince Arthur Galleries,

GERALD LAZARE, Painting the City: A Retrospective, February 29 to April 26 1992, The Market Gallery of the City of Toronto Archives,

Article periodical:

Now and Then Times, 1- 2, October 1973: “A conversation with Adrian and Pat Dingle and Bill Thomas.” Writ., Dave Sim: 27, 29,33. & “An interview with Jerry Lazare.” Writ., Dave Sim,:33..

Internet:

“Gerald John Lazare.” https://www.legacy.com/obituaries/thestar/obituary.aspx?n=gerald-john-lazare&pid=198181544 . Accessed 2 April 2021.

 

LAWSON JonArno

LAWSON JonArno 

Conceived by poet JonArno Lawson, and illustrated by Sydney Smith, Sidewalk Flowers is an interesting story told entirely in pictures without words. It won the Governor General’s Award and was named a New York Times Best Illustrated Children’s Book both in 2015.

WRITER:

BOOK GRAPHIC:

Content:

Story:

Sidewalk Flowers. Illustrator Sydney Smith. Groundwood Books/House of Anansi Press, 2015.

 

LAWRENCE Julian

LAWRENCE Julian

Born in Portsmouth England, and migrated as a child with his family in the mid 1960’s to Québec where he grew up.

In 1989, he moved to Vancouver, where he worked as writer illustrator for Fantagraphics, a story board artist for the animated series Ed, Edd n Eddy, and a character designer for another animated series Artie The Ant.

In spring 1999 he created with Robert Dayton The Drippy Gazette, a monthly two colour newspaper which in addition to “Drippy” a humanized raindrop, featured cartoons from other Vancouver artists. It ran for twelve issues. Out of this effort came Drippy Comics, which was supported by a grant from Xeric Foundation in 2000. It was also an anthology which featured “Drippy” and the works of other Vancouver artists like Colin Upton and Jason Turner, two artists associated with Cloudscape Comic Society. Julian also participated in Cloudscape’s anthology Epic Canadiana volume 2, with the humorous story “Giddy Hap and the Referendumdum.”

In 2007, he contributed art work to The Magical Life Of Long Tack Sam written by Ann Marie Fleming. It won a 2008 Doug Wright Best Book Award He also participated in the National Film Board animated adaption

In 2014, He modified his “Drippy” character to create the trilogy The Adventures of Drippy The Newsboy which is loosely based on the three novels of Stephen Crane which have similar names.

He currently [2020] is a Senior Lecturer in the Comics & Graphic Novels, Honours B.A. program at Teesside University, Middleborough England.

WORK:

CARTOONIST:

BOOK GRAPHIC:

Content novel & Cover book front:

The Adventures of Drippy The Newsboy: Drippy’s Mama. Conundrum Press, 2015.

The Adventures of Drippy The Newsboy: The Dripping Boat. Conundrum Press, 2020.

The Adventures of Drippy The Newsboy: The Red Drip Of Courage. Conundrum Press, 2015.

BOOK GRAPHIC ANTHOLOGY:

Content serial:

Epic Canadiana, v.2. Ed., Bevan Thomas. Cloudscape Comics Society, Oct. 2015: “Giddy Hap and the Referendumdum”: 159-162.

SOURCE:

Article book:

The Adventures of Drippy The Newsboy: Drippy’s Mama. Conundrum Press, 2015: Back cover.

The Adventures of Drippy The Newsboy: The Dripping Boat. Conundrum Press, 2020: Back page.

Internet:

“Julian Lawrence.” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_Lawrence. Accessed 1, February 2020.

LAWRENCE George

LAWRENCE George 

In the 1920’s he worked for the Herald [Montréal] as a reporter, columnist, sports writer and occasional cartoonist.

“During prohibition, he was once offered a job at the New York Daily News, which would have paid a great deal more than he could ever make in Canada. He refused to go on the grounds that he would never live in a country where he couldn’t get a legal drink.”” (242)

SOURCE:

Article book:

The Hecklers. Writ. & Ed.., Peter Desbarates & Terry Mosher. McClelland & Stewart Ltd., 1979: 242.

 

LAW Marvin

LAW Marvin

WORK:

ILLUSTRATOR:

BOOK GRAPHIC:

Content portrait:

Kill Shakespeare: A Sea of Troubles. IDW Publishing, Nov. 2010: Back of book.

BOOK GRAPHIC:

Content story:

Monstrosity,v.1,2 013: “Kronk The Neanderthal: Of Men & Monsters.” Writ., Phil McClorey. Tones, Jason Copland.

Monstrosity, v.2, 2014: “Zip Kramer.” Writ., Sam Noir.

LAVIGNE Michel

LAVIGNE Michel

Born 13 September 1955 in Rockland Ontario.

Studied visual arts at the University of Ottawa. Worked as a graphic artist for Illustrateurs de l’Outaouais. From 1985 he was editorial cartoonist for the weekly Le Carillon [Hawkesbury].

WORK:

CARTOONIST:

BOOK GRAPHIC ANTHOLOGY:

Content cartoon editorial:

 Portfoolio 6: The Year in Canadian Caricature. Ed., Guy Badeaux . Writ., Charles Gordon. Macmillan of Canada, 1990.

SOURCE:

 Article book:

Portfoolio 6: The Year in Canadian Caricature.1990: “Michel Lavigne”: 179.

GALLERY:

C:\Users\Robert\Documents\CARTOONING ILLUSTRATION ANIMATION\IMAGE BY CARTOONIST\L\LAVIGNE Michel, Portfoolio 6, 179.jpg Portfoolio 6: 179.

 

LAURENCE Ariane

LAURENCE Ariane

A video game animator and designer.

WORK:

ILLUSTRATOR:

BOOK GRAPHIC ANTHOLOGY:

Content story:

Toronto Comics vol., 2, Ed., Steve Andrews et al. Toronto Comics Anthology, May 2015: “The Keeper.” Writ., Nelson da Rocha: 86-89.

WRITER:

BOOK GRAPHIC ANTHOLOGY:

Content story:

Toronto Comics v. 2, Ed., Steve Andrews et al. Toronto Comics Anthology, May 2015: “Reflections.” Illus., Jesse McGibney:166-170.

SOURCE:

Article book:

Toronto Comics v., 2, May 2015: “Ariane Laurence”: 193.