"At the end of May, Al-Ghamdi
published an article in the discussions section (of the newspaper's
web site) in which he explained that from his point of view,
new ideas can never develop "unless you compare yourself
to one who is better than you, take from them what you can benefit
from and discard that which is unbeneficial in order to reach
their level." He compared his plagiarism to remaking films
and songs in which artists are influenced by those that came
before them and he believes that this act was not shameful at
all."
and this ...
"Al-Ghamdi concluded,
"This is part of the gradual development from one style
of caricature to a better one, just like any other art that needs
to go through stages of imitation in order to advance."
This process of development always experiences difficulties,
but the process must continue. This development can be tedious
and only one who experiences it can understand my point especially
when having to bear in mind many other considerations such as
publishing and copyright laws and I hope that the newspaper identifies
my respect for these laws when they go through my statements."
The article goes on to quote
Al Ghamdi saying that he may resume drawing for the Al-Watan
newspaper "in no more than three months. It was agreed that
he would take a holiday while his drawings are suspended however,
he was not sure if he would return to the newspaper at all."
Another interesting nugget from
this article, apparently referring to the administrator of the
Asharq Al-Awsat newspaper web site ...
"Asharq Al-Awsat tried
to reach the caricaturists involved but they were unavailable."
Hey
I'm easy to reach. Nobody from a Saudi newspaper tried to contact
me, or responded to my e-mails. We also post the email addresses
of the other cartoonists whose work was plagiarized; they didn't
get emails either.
To review, Al Ghamdi makes a
career out of tracing other people's work and calling it his
own. Readers send us lots of examples, which we post on the site.
Al Ghamdi writes to me, asking that I take the cartoons down,
because he might lose his job, when I don't take them down, he
writes to me, masquerading as a 16 year old boy, and sends a
bogus photo of "himself." I put this on the site, and
receive a torrent of email from readers who tell me that he isn't
really 16, he is the star cartoonist for a major Saudi paper,
whose color cartoons appear on the back page of the paper every
day, and who is a respected, award winning, Saudi cartoonist.
When I post those comments, Ali sends me a drawing of himself
with a very long penis, and this note, "This is the last
answer to you . take this, but put it slowly please." I've
gotten so many requests to see this drawing that I decided to
post it. (Sorry.)
And now it sounds like Ali may
be going back to work in his old job soon.
I was starting to miss him.
JUNE
22, 2005
AAEC CONVENTION
I attended the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists
(AAEC) convention recently in Sacramento. These conventions are
like family reunions for our tiny profession; we get together
and commiserate about how jobs are disappearing and prices for
cartoons are falling. The happy conventioneers in the photo at
the right are Mike
Keefe (left), me (middle) and Jeff
Parker (right).
Rex Babin
did an excellent job organizing the convention, rounding up some
interesting speakers, including ex-Governor Jerry Brown and current
Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger. I shook Arnold's hand and said,"I've
drawn you many times," he replied, "Oh, thank you."
... hmmm.
Turkish
cartoonist, Musa Kart came to the convention to receive an award
for his 'toon tribulations. The Prime Minister of Turkey, Recep
Tavyip Erdogan (I'll call him "PM") is suing Musa over
a cartoon that "insulted" the PM by depicting him as
a cat. In many third world countries, it is a crime to insult
a government official --but Turkey, which is trying to join the
European Union, isn't usually thought of as a third world country.
That's
the offending cartoon at the right. Read more about the case
on the FECO
site. In the photo above, Musa is receiving an award from
the Cartoonists Rights Network (CRN), bestowed by Baltimore Sun
cartoonist and CRN board member, Kevin
Kallaugher (Kal).
Musa lost in lower courts and
is currently appealing to the Turkish supreme court.The case
is viewed as important in defining the rights of the press to
criticize government officials in Turkey. In an interesting show
of support, other Turkish cartoonists have been insulting the
Prime Minister by drawing him as an animal. The cover of the
Turkish humor magazine "Penguen" (left) shows the angry
PM as various animals. The PM is also suing "Penguen"
for insulting him in the same way. I'd suggest that the cartoonists
draw this guy as a pig --or an ass.
JUNE 17, 2005
CARTOON FESTIVAL IN BRAZIL
I must apologize for being away from the blog for so long! I've
had a string of conventions and cartoons fires that I had to
put out. I was taken away from the blog for the first week of
my absence by a cartoon festival in Recife, Brazil. The festival
was funded by the state government of Pernambuco. Many governments
around the world support our art form with impressive museums
and festivals the likes of which are never seen in America. France
has a whole branch of the Louvre devoted to cartoons; it is quite
a contrast to the USA where cartooning is the retarded, funny
cousin of real "fine arts."
The
competition in Recife, Brazil's fourth largest city, was organized
by editorial cartoonist, Lailson de Hollanda and included a number
of cartoonists that were flown in from around the world to participate
on the jury and to give talks to the local cartooning community.
One cartoonist on the jury was Brazilian editorial cartooning
star, Osmani Simanca, that's Simanca on the right and Lailson on the left, pondering submissions
in the caricature category, as the jury convened in the "Daryl
Cagle" room. The festival put together exhibits on the work
of the invited jurors, which was great fun. The jurors took the
whole affair very seriously, spending about five hours sifting
through hundreds of submissions.
Recife is an interesting city
that didn't meet my preconceptions of Brazil (there were no topless
babes in thongs). This huge city is near the equator in Northeast
Brazil and is far from the popular tourist pathways. The festival
was great fun and a sincere effort by dedicated cartooning professionals.
American cartoonists rarely enter foreign cartoon competitions,
and that's a shame. I would encourage my American cartoonist
friends to enter these contests even though they might seem a
bit strange and foreign.
The cartoon at the
right won the competition as best gag/humor cartoon. It is by
Pavel Constantin, from Romania. I have noticed that the jurors
in international contests love wordless cartoons about generals,
flowers in gun barrels and people who suffer; prisoners and victims
of torture are always very popular. This one is cute.
The cartoon below won the caricature category. It is an odd,
cloth construction by Junior Lopes, of São Paulo, Brazil,
and it depicts Brazilian percussionist Naná Vasconcelos,
a celebrity who was quite familiar to the other jurors. I must
admit this one didn't make much sense to me.
The cartoon below won the editorial cartoon category, by Dálcio
Machado, from São Paulo, Brazil. This was the only category
of the festival that was not open to amateur cartoonists. Only
cartoons published between May 2004 and April 2005 were accepted
for consideration.
The cartoon below won the honorable mention, second place prize
in the editorial cartoon category. It is by Evandro Alves from
Minas Gerais, Brazil.
The comic book category was won by Leonardo Aragão, also
from São Paulo, Brazil. Entrants in this category were
limited to three pages. This winner seems to fit with the international
taste --a wordless cartoon depicting stark suffering and ridiculing
the ruling elites.
The cartoon pages below won a second place honorable mention
in the comic book category. I like this one because the renderings
are charming, although I have no idea what it says. The watercolor
is great and the hair on the girl is wonderful. This one is by
Marcelo Lélis, from Minas Gerais, Brazil.
JUNE 6, 2005
I got some interesting e-mail
this morning about plagiarist Saudi Arabian cartoonist, Ali Alghamdi.
If any of our readers are fluent in Arabic and would like to
add something about what they are reading on the subject, please
send us a note. The Alwatan
newspaper did not respond to my e-mail request for comment.
Date: Mon, 06 Jun 2005 09:42:53
+0300
From: "Dialdin, Hiba A"
Subject: Al Watan Apologizes: You Will Need an Interpretor
Thread-topic: Al Watan Apologizes: You Will Need an Interpretor
There apparently is also a discussion area with letters to the
editor published on the paper's site, as well as Ali Ghamdi's
response, but I have to get back to work!
Best,
Hiba A. Dialdin
Subject: Re: From the Saudi cartoonist artist in (Alwatan ) Saudinewespaper
Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2005 14:02:53 +0300
Hi Daryl,
Alwatan Newspaper fired Al-ghamdi today ago and they publish
that today in this link http://www.alwatan.com.sa/daily/2005-06-06/readers.htm
they said that they made a big case and researches and they contacted
the owners of the original cartoons and they send them a big
apology from the newspaper.
is that true?
They never contacted me, as a cartoonist whose work was copied
or in response to my inquiry.
Subject: Re: From the Saudi cartoonist artist in (Alwatan ) Saudinewespaper
Date: Mon, 6 Jun 2005 19:32:23 +0300
I know that you can't read Arabic
but I thought you know some ppl who would help you...
about the article that was published today I think I got it wrong,
they are saying that "
.....When the matter of a stolen cartoons by Ali Alghamdi stirred,
readers sent out letters showing their inquiries and wonders
of what happened. Some letters have been in posted in "discussions
page" considering that the readers have the right to know
the truth, then artist Al-Ghamdi posted a reply in the same
page of the subject.
After investigating and looking into the original figures and
cartoons and the copies, Alwatan decided to stop Al-Ghamdi for
publishing in the newspaper and in the mean time apologizing
to the cartoonists and artists about what have been published
despite the fact that the newspaper didn't know about
it and to the readers. Alwatan is assuring that it fully respects
the intellectual properties for the cartoonists"
I thought they said that they "did", sorry, my bad
:)
some people commented in the
internet about the "smart move" of Alwatan newspaper.
because they didn't say that they fired him, they only said that
they are stopping him publishing. to show that Al-Ghamdi is not
an Employee he is "just" participating artist, just
to get rid of any legal cases might show up.
JUNE 5, 2005
Why do the cartoonists assume
that Richard Nixon is in HEAVEN?
JUNE 1, 2005
Ali al-Ghamdi just sent me a drawing of himself with very large
genitals. This guy is a hoot.