
The original meaning was in fine art, and there cartoon meant a preparatory drawing for a piece of art such as a painting or tapestry.
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The Cartoon Blog by Dave Walker
... blog posts. Page explaining how you can re-use the cartoons ... Return of the Cartoon Blog. I have been blocked from making Facebook notes. Website problems ...www.cartoonchurch.com/blog/We Blog Cartoons
You can add this cartoon to your blog, subject to one or two very basic conditions. ... <p>Cartoon by <a href="http://www.cartoonchurch.com/blog/">Dave Walker ...www.weblogcartoons.com/Catholic Cartoon Blog
2009 Cannonball Catholic Blog Awards! ... St. John Valdosta's Blog. A Walled Garden (Scotland) Athanasius Contra Mundum. Catholic Mom ...www.catholiccartoonblog.blogspot.com/Andertoons Cartoon Blog
Andertoons Cartoon Blog is cartoonist Mark Anderson's popular blog about cartoons, being a cartoonist, cartooning, and occasionally robots & other stuff.andertoons.typepad.com/cartoon_blog/BALOO'S CARTOON BLOG
... older blog — Now a political cartoon archive. Baloo cartoons at ... Steve Sailer's political blog. Srini Bhukya's Toonbag. John Bergstrom's Attack Cartoons ...balooscartoonblog.blogspot.com/
The original meaning was in fine art, and there cartoon meant a preparatory drawing for a piece of art such as a painting or tapestry.
The somewhat more modern meaning was that of humorous illustrations in magazines and newspapers. Even more recently there are now several contemporary meanings, including creative visual work for print media, for electronic media, and even animated films and animated digital media.
When the word cartoon is applied to print media, it most often refers to a humorous single-panel drawing or gag cartoon, most of which have captions and do not use speech balloons. The word cartoon is not often used to refer to a comic strip.
The artists who draw cartoons are known as cartoonists.
Art

Print media

In modern print media, a cartoon is a piece of art, usually humorous in intent. This usage dates from 1843 when Punch magazine applied the term to satirical drawings in its pages, particularly sketches by John Leech. The first of these parodied the preparatory cartoons for grand historical frescoes in the then-new Palace of Westminster. The original title for these drawings was Mr Punch's face is the letter Q and the new title "cartoon" was intended to be ironic, a reference to the self-aggrandising posturing of Westminster politicians.
Modern single-panel cartoons or gag cartoons, found in magazines and newspapers, generally consist of a single drawing with a caption immediately beneath or (much less often) a speech balloon. Many consider New Yorker cartoonist Peter Arno the father of the modern gag cartoon (as did Arno himself). Gag cartoonists of note include Charles Addams, Gary Larson, Charles Barsotti, Chon Day and Mel Calman.
Editorial cartoons are a type of gag cartoon found almost exclusively in news publications and news websites. Although they also employ humor, they are more serious in tone, commonly using irony or satire. The art usually acts as a visual metaphor to illustrate a point of view on current social and/or political topics. Editorial cartoons often include speech balloons and, sometimes, multiple panels. Editorial cartoonists of note include Herblock, Mike Peters, David Low, Jeff MacNelly and Gerald Scarfe.
Comic strips, also known as "cartoon strips" in the United Kingdom, are found daily in newspapers worldwide, and are usually a short series of cartoon illustrations in sequence. In the United States they are not as commonly called "cartoons" themselves, but rather "comics" or "funnies". Nonetheless, the creators of comic strips—as well as comic books and graphic novels—are referred to as "cartoonists". Although humor is the most prevalent subject matter, adventure and drama are also represented in this medium. Noteworthy cartoonists in this sense include Charles Schulz, Bill Watterson, Scott Adams, Mort Walker, Steve Bell.


























