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Wednesday Spill: Fave Photo Of The Week…Emily Sanders Hopkins, Sara Lautman At “Women Laughing” Screening In D.C.; Video Of Interest…The Latest “Talk & Draw With Heather Cox Richardson And Liza Donnelly”

17 June 2026 at 12:53

Fave Photo Of The Week

The above group photo was taken the other day in Washington, D.C., at DC/Dox, where Women Laughing was screened. The film, directed by Kathleen Hughes (third from left) and Liza Donnelly second from left), has been popping up at numerous festivals this year.

New Yorker cartoonists, Sara Lautman (second from right), and Emily Sanders Hopkins (first on the right) participated in a panel discussion following the screening.

Also pictured: Women Laughing producers Judith Mizrachy (first on the left), and Nathalie Seaver (fourth from left).

Photo by (New Yorker cartoonist) Marshall Hopkins

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And In Other Donnelly News…

Check out the latest in the series, Talk & Draw With Heather Cox Richardson and Liza Donnelly here (the subject this time ’round is Watergate).

 

 

The post Wednesday Spill: Fave Photo Of The Week…Emily Sanders Hopkins, Sara Lautman At “Women Laughing” Screening In D.C.; Video Of Interest…The Latest “Talk & Draw With Heather Cox Richardson And Liza Donnelly” first appeared on Inkspill.
  • ✇Inkspill
  • Sunday Spill: A New Yorker State Of Mind On The Issue Of April 11, 1936 michael
    A New Yorker State Of Mind Digs Into The Issue Of April 11, 1936   A New Yorker State Of Mind: Reading Every Issue Of The New Yorker: always fun, always interesting reading. This week: the issue of April 11, 1936. Read it here.  Cover by Helen Hokinson. Her A-Z Entry:   Helen Hokinson (above) Born, Illinois,1893; died, Washington, D.C., 1949. New Yorker work: 1925 -1949, with some work published posthumously. All of Hokinson’s collections are wonderful, but here are two favorites. Her first c
     

Sunday Spill: A New Yorker State Of Mind On The Issue Of April 11, 1936

26 April 2026 at 12:42

A New Yorker State Of Mind Digs Into The Issue Of April 11, 1936

 

A New Yorker State Of Mind: Reading Every Issue Of The New Yorker: always fun, always interesting reading.

This week: the issue of April 11, 1936. Read it here. 

Cover by Helen Hokinson.

Her A-Z Entry:

 

Helen Hokinson (above) Born, Illinois,1893; died, Washington, D.C., 1949. New Yorker work: 1925 -1949, with some work published posthumously. All of Hokinson’s collections are wonderful, but here are two favorites. Her first collection: So You’re Going To Buy A Book! (Minton, Balch & Co, 1931) and what was billed as “the final Hokinson collection”: The Hokinson Festival (Dutton & Co., 1956). According to a New Yorker document produced during Harold Ross’s editorship (1925-1951) rating their artists, Ms. Hokinson and Peter Arno occupied a special category unto themselves above all others.

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  • ✇Dave Walker
  • 20 reasons to love cycling Dave Walker
    One of the first cycling cartoons I drew. A bit more about the road / sport side of cycling than some of my more recent work. Found in the Cycling Cartoonist, published by Bloomsbury. The post 20 reasons to love cycling appeared first on Dave Walker.
     

20 reasons to love cycling

14 April 2025 at 16:06

One of the first cycling cartoons I drew.

A bit more about the road / sport side of cycling than some of my more recent work.

Found in the Cycling Cartoonist, published by Bloomsbury.

The post 20 reasons to love cycling appeared first on Dave Walker.

Friday Spill: Simon Fieldhouse’s Latest 3D Portrait Sculpture: Peter Arno; Frank Cotham Returns As Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast Guest; Paul Karasik Presents…

24 April 2026 at 12:10

 

Simon Fieldhouse’s Latest 3D Portrait Sculpture: Peter Arno

Next up in artist Simon Fieldhouse‘s New Yorker series: Peter Arno. See the sculpture in various settings here.

And here are his other New Yorker 3D sculptures:

Eustace Tilley

Harold Ross

Saul Steinberg

To see all of his 3D sculptures, go here.

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Frank Cotham Returns As Guest On Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast

Frank Cotham, who began contributing to The New Yorker in 1993, returns to the CCCP in this episode (#248 for those keeping track). Listen here.

photo: clockwise, from top left…Frank Cotham, then the co-hosts Paul  Nesja, Vin Coca, Nicole Chrolavicius, Beth Lawler. 

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Paul Karasik Presents…

From The Vineyard Gazette, April 23, 2026, “Film Noir Takes Center Stage” — this piece on films and Mr. Karasik, who began contributing to The New Yorker  in 1999.  Visit his website here.

 

 

 

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The post Friday Spill: Simon Fieldhouse’s Latest 3D Portrait Sculpture: Peter Arno; Frank Cotham Returns As Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast Guest; Paul Karasik Presents… first appeared on Inkspill.
  • ✇Lucy Bellwood
  • Maximum Melville Lucy Bellwood
    A number of fantastic ducks lined up in the month of June and I want to talk about all of them, but there isn’t time to do it in one giant post. One duck, however, took the form of appearing at the 14th International Melville Society Conference to speak about my time aboard the Charles W. Morgan eleven years ago. (You can read the comic about that trip here.) I read Moby-Dick for the first time a handful of years ago and loved it, but I wouldn’t call myself a Melville scholar. However, at
     

Maximum Melville

29 June 2025 at 22:10

A number of fantastic ducks lined up in the month of June and I want to talk about all of them, but there isn’t time to do it in one giant post. One duck, however, took the form of appearing at the 14th International Melville Society Conference to speak about my time aboard the Charles W. Morgan eleven years ago. (You can read the comic about that trip here.)

A spread from Lucy's comic, Down to the Seas Again.

I read Moby-Dick for the first time a handful of years ago and loved it, but I wouldn’t call myself a Melville scholar. However, attending this conference felt like a great chance to scratch the academic itch without, say, going to grad school.

I ended up spending the whole week taking visual notes, which allowed me to drop into a type of weightless, fixated attention that I’ve really missed in my caregiving life. It also helped give me something to do during panels where I felt a little, uh, out of my depth.

A sample of illustrated speakers from the Melville Society Conference.

When I’m drawing, words just wash over me. I can pluck the ones that resonate in the moment, then step back at the end of the hour and get a picture of what I took away from the talk. I particularly loved the freedom to just wander into panels where I had no idea what the speakers were talking about, only to come away newly-enthused about some niche avenue into Melville’s work.

A photo of an auditorium full of Melville scholars.

Time and time again the attendees emphasized how unique this conference is in its warmth and intellectual diversity. I met scientists and art historians and medievalists and printmakers and disability scholars and tall ship sailors and filmmakers and many, many professors. It was a dreamy, albeit intense, four days.

Here are the notes from every talk I attended, all drawn straight to ink during the speakers’ presentations (usually about 20 minutes per person).

The biggest takeaway was that we need embedded cartoonists at all sorts of academic conferences—and the demand is there! People were so thrilled to see this kind of work coming out of the event, and there are lots of journals hungry to publish unusual creative content alongside academic papers.

Something to pursue…eventually. Got a couple things* to wrap up first.

*unfathomably vast creative projects

Saturday Spill: Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast Celebrates Its 250 Episode; Paul Noth Cartoon Collection Cover Revealed

9 May 2026 at 13:06

Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast Celebrates Its 250 Episode

Congrats to the fine folks at the Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast on their 250th! Listen to their special episode here. 

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Paul Noth Cartoon Collection Cover Revealed

The collection by Mr. Noth, who has been contributing to The New Yorker since 2004, will be out this October.

The post Saturday Spill: Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast Celebrates Its 250 Episode; Paul Noth Cartoon Collection Cover Revealed first appeared on Inkspill.
  • ✇Inkspill
  • Friday Spill: The New Yorker’s First Memorial Day Cover michael
                                                 Arthur Getz’s Memorial Day Cover I could be wrong about this, but I believe that this Arthur Getz cover, dated May 30, 1958, is the first Memorial Day themed New Yorker cover (I looked through every end of May issue from 1925 to 1958). The cover shows us  The Eternal Light Flagstaff located in Manhattan’s Madison Square Park, along its west side on Broadway. The screen grab from Google’s street map shows the monument today (the base mostly obscured b
     

Friday Spill: The New Yorker’s First Memorial Day Cover

22 May 2026 at 13:56

                                             Arthur Getz’s Memorial Day Cover

I could be wrong about this, but I believe that this Arthur Getz cover, dated May 30, 1958, is the first Memorial Day themed New Yorker cover (I looked through every end of May issue from 1925 to 1958). The cover shows us  The Eternal Light Flagstaff located in Manhattan’s Madison Square Park, along its west side on Broadway.

The screen grab from Google’s street map shows the monument today (the base mostly obscured by a blossom tree. A few of the buildings Mr. Getz painted remain along Broadway.

Dedicated on Veteran’s Day in the mid 1920s, the monument, according to the New York Department of Records includes a:

star-shaped luminaire at the top of the pole [that] is intended to be lit at all times as an eternal tribute to those who paid the supreme sacrifice. 

More about the Eternal Light Flagstaff here, with history and photos

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Arthur Getz’s A-Z Entry:

Arthur Getz Born, Passaic, New Jersey, 1913; died, 1996. NYer work: 1938 -1988. Primarily a cover artist, he had one cartoon published: March 15, 1958. (You might say his career was a mirror image of George Price’s, who was one of the most prolific cartoonists, with over 1200 published, and one cover). According to the official Getz website, he was the most prolific of all New Yorker cover artists, having 213 appear during the fifty years he contributed to the magazine. The official Getz website, containing his biography.

 

 

 

 

 

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Friday Spill: Polly Lou Adams Guests On The Latest Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast; A New Yorker State Of Mind On The issue Of April 25, 1936; Article Of Interest…Guy Richards Smit; Live Interview Of Interest: Liza Donnelly On Radio Free Rhinecliff

1 May 2026 at 11:28

Polly Lou Adams Guests On The Latest Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast

Polly Lou Adams (upper left in the photo), who began contributing to The New Yorker in June of 2025, joins two of four CCCP co-hosts, Paul Nesja (upper right) and Nicole Chrolavicius. It’s Episode #249 for those keeping track. Listen here. 

Visit Polly Lou Adams website here. ___________________________________________________________________

A New Yorker State Of Mind Digs Into The Issue Of April 25, 1936

 

A New Yorker State of Mind: Reading Every Issue of The New Yorker Magazine continues its good work

Read it here. 

Cover by Rea Irvin: Born, San Francisco, 1881; died in the Virgin Islands,1972. Irvin was the cover artist for the New Yorker’s first issue, February 21, 1925. He was the magazine’s first art and only art supervisor (some refer to him as its first art editor) holding the position from 1925 until 1939 when James Geraghty assumed the title of art editor. Irvin then became art director and remained in that position until William Shawn officially succeeded Harold Ross in early 1952. Irvin’s last original work for the magazine was the magazine’s cover of July 12, 1958. The February 21, 1925 Eustace Tilley cover had been reproduced every year on the magazine’s anniversary until 1994, when R. Crumb’s Tilley-inspired cover appeared. Tilley has since reappeared, with other artists substituting from time-to-time. Number of New Yorker covers (not including the repeat appearances of the first cover every anniversary up to 1991): 179. Number of cartoons contributed: 261. 

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Article Of Interest…Guy Richards Smit

From The Creative Independent, April 30, 2026, Mr. Smit’s  conversation with Brandon Stosay. 

Guy Richards Smit began contributing to The New Yorker in 2022.

 

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Live Interview Of Interest: Liza Donnelly On Radio Free Rhinecliff

Liza Donnelly, long-time New Yorker contributor, and filmmaker (Women Laughing) will be live today at 5 on Radio Free Rhinecliff. Listen here.  

 

Photo: Eric Korenman

 

 

The post Friday Spill: Polly Lou Adams Guests On The Latest Cartoon Caption Contest Podcast; A New Yorker State Of Mind On The issue Of April 25, 1936; Article Of Interest…Guy Richards Smit; Live Interview Of Interest: Liza Donnelly On Radio Free Rhinecliff first appeared on Inkspill.
  • ✇Inkspill
  • Sunday Spill: David Remnick: “…Knicks On The Cover For The Next 20 Weeks” michael
    Knicks Covers… After Game 1 of the Knicks/Spurs game the other night, The New Yorker went live on Substack to dissect the evening. The magazine’s editor, David Remnick, was joined by two contributors, Vinson Cunningham and Louisa Thomas. Mr. Remnick, talking about the reading public’s demand for Mark Ulriksen’s recent New Yorker cover (above, left) said (jokingly): “Well, my grand plan is to just put the Knicks on the cover for the next 20 weeks.”  Knicks fans will recall John Cuneo‘s great co
     

Sunday Spill: David Remnick: “…Knicks On The Cover For The Next 20 Weeks”

7 June 2026 at 15:37

Knicks Covers…

After Game 1 of the Knicks/Spurs game the other night, The New Yorker went live on Substack to dissect the evening. The magazine’s editor, David Remnick, was joined by two contributors, Vinson Cunningham and Louisa Thomas.

Mr. Remnick, talking about the reading public’s demand for Mark Ulriksen’s recent New Yorker cover (above, left) said (jokingly): “Well, my grand plan is to just put the Knicks on the cover for the next 20 weeks.” 

Knicks fans will recall John Cuneo‘s great cover of December 9, 2024:

 

 

 

The post Sunday Spill: David Remnick: “…Knicks On The Cover For The Next 20 Weeks” first appeared on Inkspill.
  • ✇Inkspill
  • Thurber Thursday: Thurber Prizes Awarded Tonight In Columbus!; Latest Addition To The Archives…A Script michael
    Thurber Prizes Awarded Tonight In Columbus From The Columbus Dispatch, May 5, 2026, “Thurber Prize For American Humor To Celebrate Laughter In Literature” [and cartoons!]. The Spill again congratulates Emily Flake for being named the 2026 recipient of the Thurber Prize For American Humor In Cartoon Art. The winner for literature will be announced this evening.   _____________________________________________________ Latest Addition to The Archives…A Script A script came this way recently, court
     

Thurber Thursday: Thurber Prizes Awarded Tonight In Columbus!; Latest Addition To The Archives…A Script

7 May 2026 at 12:52

Thurber Prizes Awarded Tonight In Columbus

From The Columbus Dispatch, May 5, 2026, “Thurber Prize For American Humor To Celebrate Laughter In Literature” [and cartoons!].

The Spill again congratulates Emily Flake for being named the 2026 recipient of the Thurber Prize For American Humor In Cartoon Art. The winner for literature will be announced this evening.

 

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Latest Addition to The Archives…A Script

A script came this way recently, courtesy of a loyal Spill reader (thank you loyal Spill reader!).
Dated May 15, 1969, the script is for an episode of the Thurber inspired television series, “My World, & Welcome To It.”
The episode was the third of the one season series, broadcast September 29, 1969. Through the magic of Youtube, one can see the episode here.
More about the show here. 
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James Thurber’s A-Z Entry

James Thurber Born, Columbus, Ohio, December 8, 1894. Died 1961, New York City. New Yorker work: 1927 -1961, with several pieces run posthumously. According to the New Yorker’s legendary editor, William Shawn, “In the early days, a small company of writers, artists, and editors — E.B. White, James Thurber, Peter Arno, and Katharine White among them — did more to make the magazine what it is than can be measured.”

Key cartoon collection: The Seal in the Bedroom and Other Predicaments (Harper & Bros., 1932). Key anthology (writings & drawings): The Thurber Carnival (Harper & Row, 1945). There have been a number of Thurber biographies. Burton Bernstein’s Thurber (Dodd, Mead, 1975) and Harrison Kinney’s James Thurber: His Life and Times (Henry Holt & Co., 1995) are essential. Website

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  • ✇Inkspill
  • Tuesday Spill: Bishakh Som In Group Exhibit; Roxie Munro Gallery Appearance michael
    Bishakh Som In Group Exhibit The exhibit, “Drawn Out: A Queer Comics Celebration” includes work by Bishakh Som, who began contributing to The New Yorker in 2018. _________________________________________________________________ Roxie Munro Gallery Appearance The terrif New Yorker cover artist, Roxie Munro, was recently at The Annapolis Gallery, signing books, and talking about her work. Visit her website here.  Ms. Munro contributed 14 covers to The New Yorker.    The post Tuesday Spill: Bish
     

Tuesday Spill: Bishakh Som In Group Exhibit; Roxie Munro Gallery Appearance

16 June 2026 at 12:47

Bishakh Som In Group Exhibit

The exhibit, “Drawn Out: A Queer Comics Celebration” includes work by Bishakh Som, who began contributing to The New Yorker in 2018.

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Roxie Munro Gallery Appearance

The terrif New Yorker cover artist, Roxie Munro, was recently at The Annapolis Gallery, signing books, and talking about her work. Visit her website here. 

Ms. Munro contributed 14 covers to The New Yorker.

 

 

The post Tuesday Spill: Bishakh Som In Group Exhibit; Roxie Munro Gallery Appearance first appeared on Inkspill.
  • ✇Inkspill
  • Thurber Thursday: The Debut Of The Thurber Dog michael
    Looking at James Thurber’s first New Yorker cartoons this morning, it came as quite a surprise that the famous “Thurber dog” did not make an appearance in the magazine until 29 Thurber cartoons had been published in the magazine (I’m not including the ones that showed up in his “Our Pet Department” series. While I love those dogs, they’re not the dog you see above, shown here in eraser form). In fact, not a one of those first 29 Thurber drawings had a dog anywhere in sight. When the classic Thu
     

Thurber Thursday: The Debut Of The Thurber Dog

4 June 2026 at 12:26

Looking at James Thurber’s first New Yorker cartoons this morning, it came as quite a surprise that the famous “Thurber dog” did not make an appearance in the magazine until 29 Thurber cartoons had been published in the magazine (I’m not including the ones that showed up in his “Our Pet Department” series. While I love those dogs, they’re not the dog you see above, shown here in eraser form). In fact, not a one of those first 29 Thurber drawings had a dog anywhere in sight. When the classic Thurber dog did show up, in the issue of February 6, 1932, it was not an incidental dog in a cartoon featuring humans. The dog was the star of the show — the main attraction, and it made its debut in a 16 part(!) spread that traveled across the magazine’s gutter. I’ll show you the first part here:

The entire piece can be found in his collections, The Seal In The Bedroom, The Thurber Carnival, and Thurber’s Dogs (to mention just a few). If you have a subscription to The New Yorker you can, of course, find it in the archive, on pages 22-23 of the February 6, 1932 issue. It’s online here as well.

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James Thurber’s A-Z:

James Thurber Born, Columbus, Ohio, December 8, 1894. Died 1961, New York City. New Yorker work: 1927 -1961, with several pieces run posthumously. According to the New Yorker’s legendary editor, William Shawn, “In the early days, a small company of writers, artists, and editors — E.B. White, James Thurber, Peter Arno, and Katharine White among them — did more to make the magazine what it is than can be measured.”

Key cartoon collection: The Seal in the Bedroom and Other Predicaments (Harper & Bros., 1932). Key anthology (writings & drawings): The Thurber Carnival (Harper & Row, 1945). There have been a number of Thurber biographies. Burton Bernstein’s Thurber (Dodd, Mead, 1975) and Harrison Kinney’s James Thurber: His Life and Times (Henry Holt & Co., 1995) are essential. Website

 

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