Laurence Clark (born 1949) is a New Zealand cartoonist and illustrator.
He started his career in illustration in 1967 at the New Zealand Herald. [1] He was the political cartoonist there from 1987 to 1996 and now freelances from Northland and is the Northern Advocate's editorial cartoonist. [2] [3] He publishes his cartoons under the name of "Klarc".
"Kiwi" is a common self-reference used by New Zealanders, though it is also used internationally. It is generally viewed as a symbol of pride and affection for most people of New Zealand.
Murray Hone Ball was a New Zealand cartoonist who became known for his Stanley the Palaeolithic Hero, Bruce the Barbarian, All the King's Comrades and the long-running Footrot Flats comic series. In the 2002 Queen's Birthday and Golden Jubilee Honours, Ball was appointed an Officer of the New Zealand Order of Merit, for services as a cartoonist.
The New Zealand Herald is a daily newspaper published in Auckland, New Zealand, owned by New Zealand Media and Entertainment, and considered a newspaper of record for New Zealand.
Peter Bromhead is a New Zealand commercial interior designer, cartoonist and illustrator.
Malcolm Paul Evans is a New Zealand cartoonist residing in Auckland.
Robert Ellison Brockie is a New Zealand cartoonist, scientist, columnist and graphic artist.
Garrick Tremain is a New Zealand cartoonist and painter living in Queenstown.
Sir Gordon Edward George Minhinnick was a New Zealand cartoonist.
The following lists events that happened during 1949 in New Zealand.
Anthony Ellison is a New Zealand cartoonist and animator.
Allan Charles Hawkey is a cartoonist based in Hamilton, New Zealand. He was editorial cartoonist for the Timaru Herald between 1982 and 1990, signing himself as 'Hawkeye'. His cartoons have appeared in the Waikato Times since 1998 .
William Blomfield was a New Zealand cartoonist and local politician. He was born in Auckland, New Zealand on 1 April 1866. Between 1914 and 1921 he was the second Mayor of Takapuna.
Trace Hodgson is a New Zealand cartoonist. He began cartooning for the Christchurch Press in 1979. His work has appeared in the New Zealand Listener, NZ Truth, Christchurch Press, New Zealand Times, Nelson Mail and the Dominion Post. He became the Listener's political cartoonist in 1984.
Neville Maurice Colvin was a New Zealand-born cartoonist and illustrator. Dr Warren Feeney has referred to him as "alongside [David] Low [...] undoubtedly New Zealand's most famous international illustrator".
John Henry Gilmour was a New Zealand cartoonist. He was born in Christchurch and drew for the Canterbury Times, the Christchurch Star, the New Zealand Free Lance and the New Zealand Truth. He lived in England for several years from 1932, where he drew for the Evening Standard. During this time he also worked as a cartoonist for the British Union of Fascists and his work appeared in the movement's newspapers Fascist Week and The Blackshirt until 1935. He returned to New Zealand in the late 1930s, again working for Truth and the Star.
John Cecil Hill (1889-1974) was a New Zealand cartoonist and artist, usually referred to as J. C. Hill. He was born in Sheffield and worked as a 'tea planter in Ceylon and a commercial turtle hunter' before moving to New Zealand.
Eceldowne or Eceldoune Frederick Hiscocks was an Australian-born cartoonist who worked in New Zealand and England. He was commonly known as Fred Hiscocks and signed his work 'EFH'. He produced popular 'cartoon booklets' in the early 1900s and his cartoons appeared in the Christchurch Weekly Press (1902-1914), New Zealand Free Lance, the Citizen (1909), and the Critic (1899). During World War I he produced cartoons for the Chronicles of the NZEF. He joined the London Daily News in 1925.
William Francis Celestine Hope was an Australian-born political cartoonist. His work was published in the Cumberland Argus in Australia and in Truth in New Zealand in 1912. By 1915, he had moved to the United States, where he was published in the New York Globe and The Masses. He then worked in London, drawing for a number of Fleet Street newspapers and the Communist. He often worked under the pseudonym 'Espoir'.
Jim Hubbard is a New Zealand cartoonist. He joined the Daily Telegraph in 1985. His work has appeared in a number of New Zealand newspapers, including the Dominion Post, Bay of Plenty Times, the Southland Times, the Daily Telegraph (Napier), the Northern Advocate and the Otago Daily Times. He won the New Zealand Cartoonist of the Year in 2011 at the Canon Media Awards.
James Robert Lynch is a New Zealand cartoonist and conservationist.