American cartoonists Ann Telnaes is a Swedish-American editorial cartoonist. Unlike many editorial cartoonists, Telnaes does not draw for any one set newspaper, and her cartoons are instead syndicated across the United States. In 2001 she became the second woman cartoonist to win the Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning. ...more on Wikipedia about "Ann Telnaes"
Art Spiegelman (born February 15, 1948) is a Jewish, Swedish American comics artist, editor and advocate for the medium of comics. ...more on Wikipedia about "Art Spiegelman"
Arthur Szyk ( 1894 - 1951) was a Poland-born United States artist, famous for his anti- Axis political illustrations and cartoons during World War II. ...more on Wikipedia about "Arthur Szyk"
Bernard "Hap" Kliban (b. 1935, d. 1990) was an influential cartoonist born in New York. He studied at the Pratt Institute and spent time painting and travelling in Europe before moving to California near San Francisco. He is best-known for the book Cat, a collection of cartoons about cats in Kliban's distinctive style. ...more on Wikipedia about "B. Kliban"
Basil Wolverton ( 1909– 1978) was an American comic artist and writer known for his humorous and grotesque illustrations. He labeled himself a "producer of preposterous pictures of peculiar people." ...more on Wikipedia about "Basil Wolverton"
Bill Griffith (born William Henry Jackson Griffith in 1944) is a popular cartoonist in the United States. He is best known for his panel cartoon Zippy the Pinhead. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bill Griffith"
Bill Holbrook is a prolific American comic strip writer and artist. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bill Holbrook"
William Henry "Bill" Mauldin ( October 29, 1921 – January 22, 2003) was a Pulitzer Prize-winning editorial cartoonist of the United States. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bill Mauldin"
Bill Melendez (born José Cuauhtemoc Melendez on November 15, 1916 in Hermosillo, Mexico) is a Mexican-born American character animator, film director, and film producer, known for his cartoons for Warner Brothers and the Charlie Brown series. Melendez provided the voice of Snoopy the dog in the latter as well. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bill Melendez"
Bill Wray is an American cartoonist and landscape painter. He spent much of his childhood traveling about as an Army brat. As a self-taught artist, he first worked in the animation industry while still a teenager, but eventually, he chose to study at New York's Art Students League. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bill Wray"
Boardman Robinson ( September 6, 1876 - September 5, 1952) was a Canadian- American artist, illustrator and cartoonist. ...more on Wikipedia about "Boardman Robinson"
Bob Dunn was an American cartoonist. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bob Dunn (cartoonist)"
Robert P. Gregory ( 1921- 2003) was an American comics artist and writer. After having fought in World War 2 and worked as a technical illustrator, Gregory worked with Disney comics from 1958 to 1984 - first as a writer, then as both writer and artist. He introuced the Billionaires Club of Duckburg, where Scrooge McDuck is a member, in the story The Christmas Cha Cha ( 1959), which was written by Gregory and illustrated by Carl Barks. After having done Scrooge McDuck universe comics only in his early career, he started doing Aristocats stories in the 1970s. Gregory did some other comics as well. His WW2 memoirs, Letters from the South Pacific, was published in 1996. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bob Gregory"
Bob Montana ( October 23, 1920 - January 4, 1975) was an American cartoonist who fashioned the characters that launched Archie Comics. Born in Stockton, California, Montana was the son of ex- Ziegfeld girl Roberta Pandolfini Montana and Ray Montana, a top banjo player on the Keith vaudeville circuit. Traveling all 48 states before the age of nine, Montana received his childhood schooling backstage in theater dressing rooms. During his early teen years, he lived in Boston's theater district. With his father's death and his mother's remarriage, he moved to Haverhill, Massachusetts; his stepfather managed a theatrical costume shop in Bradford. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bob Montana" Go crack a http://www.shortopedia.com! American_cartoonists
Brad Anderson (born 1924) is an American cartoonist. He is most famous for creating the comic strip Marmaduke, which he continues to draw to this day. He received the National Cartoonist Society Newspaper Panel Cartoon Award for the series in 1978. ...more on Wikipedia about "Brad Anderson (cartoonist)"
Brian Giovannini, born in 1974 in Florence, Italy, His comic panel, " Postage Due" appeared in newspapers in California, Colorado, Montana, Utah, Texas, New York, New Jersey, and Iowa, from 2000 to 2002. Brian Giovannini grew up in Des Moines, Iowa. He collaborated in a comic strip titled "Partly Cloudy" which ran in the local newspaper, The Des Moines Comic Outlet. He was an illustrator for the Des Moines Symphony Cookbook and a cartoonist for Aon Consulting. He is the former editorial cartoonist for the Swainsboro, Georgia Forest-Blade. ...more on Wikipedia about "Brian Giovannini"
Brian Ralph is an underground American cartoonist residing in Baltimore, Maryland. He graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1996 with a BA in Illustration. Brian's illustrations have appeared in a number of publications, including Wired and the New York Post. He is a member of the underground art collective known as Fort Thunder. His comic 'Cave-In' was very well received, and was nominated for three Harveys and one Eisner award, as well as being picked as one of the five best comics of 1999, according to the Comics Journal. For some reason, he is routinely interviewed in skateboarding magazines. ...more on Wikipedia about "Brian Ralph"
Bruce Eric Kaplan, known as BEK, is an American cartoonist whose single panel cartoons frequently appear in The New Yorker. Kaplan is also a screenwriter and has worked on Seinfeld and on Six Feet Under. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bruce Eric Kaplan"
Bruce Lewis (born Dallas, Texas, 1965) [pseudonym B-chan] is an American cartoonist, artist, and author. ...more on Wikipedia about "Bruce Lewis"
Carl Barks ( March 27, 1901 – August 25, 2000) was a famous Disney Studio illustrator and comic book creator, who invented Duckburg and many of its inhabitants, such as Scrooge McDuck (1947), Gladstone Gander (1948), the Beagle Boys (1951) and Gyro Gearloose (1952). The quality of his scripts and drawings earned him the nick names The Duck Man and The Good Duck Artist. He has been called the H.C. Andersen of the 20th century. ...more on Wikipedia about "Carl Barks"
Carl Fallberg (1915 – May 1996) was a Disney Comics artist who wrote and drew many Disney Comics. He did mostly Mickey Mouse stories along side Paul Murry and he also created Lil Bad Wolf and did some Bucky Bug stories. He also did some Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge stories on occaision also. In the 1940s and 1950s, his Fiddletown & Copperopolis comic strip appeared in Railroad Magazine. ...more on Wikipedia about "Carl Fallberg"
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Carol Tyler is an American cartoonist known for her autobiographical comics. ...more on Wikipedia about "Carol Tyler"
Cayetano 'Cat' Garza is a comic artist, cartoonist, illustrator, and musician in the United States. He is best known for his experiments with webcomics. ...more on Wikipedia about "Cayetano Garza"
Charles Samuel Addams ( January 7, 1912 - September 28, 1988) was an American cartoonist known for his particularly black humor and macabre characters. His cartoons regularly appeared in The New Yorker from 1938 until his death. Some of the recurring characters, who became known as The Addams Family, became the basis for two live action television series, two cartoon series, and three motion pictures. It is said that the exterior of the Addams Family Mansion was based on a home in Westfield, New Jersey. ...more on Wikipedia about "Charles Addams"
Charles R. Bowers ( 1889 - November 26, 1946) was an American cartoonist and slapstick comedian during the silent film and early " talkie" era. He was forgotten for decades and his name was notably absent from most histories of the Silent Era. However, his surviving films have an inventiveness and surrealism which give them a freshness that appeals to modern audiences. In appearance, he had a strong resemblance to both Harry Langdon and Buster Keaton and was known to the French as "Bricolo." ...more on Wikipedia about "Charles Bowers" This text is made on http://www.shortopedia.com
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