Leanne Shapton | |
---|---|
Born | Mississauga, Ontario, Canada | June 25, 1973
Area(s) | Cartoonist |
http://www.leanneshapton.com/ |
Leanne Shapton (born June 25, 1973) in Mississauga, Ontario [1] is a Canadian artist and graphic novelist, now living in New York City. She is the art editor for the New York Review of Books . Her second work, Important Artifacts and Personal Property From the Collection of Lenore Doolan and Harold Morris, Including Books, Street Fashion and Jewelry, was optioned for a film slated to star Brad Pitt and Natalie Portman. [2] The novel, which takes the form of an auction catalog, uses photographs and accompanying captions to chronicle the romance and subsequent breakup of a couple via the relationship's significant possessions or "artifacts".
Shapton's first work, Was She Pretty?, was a nominee for the Doug Wright Award, a Canadian award for comics and graphic novels, in 2007. It explored, via a series of line-drawn illustrations, the issues of relationship jealousy and insecurity as told through the imagined superior traits of the subjects' exes.
Shapton has been art director at newspapers and magazines. [3] Formerly associated with Saturday Night , Maclean's and the National Post in Canada, she has worked as art director for the op-ed page at The New York Times . [2] She has created hand lettering for a number of book covers, including Chuck Palahniuk's 2003 novel Diary . She is also a partner in J&L Books. [4]
Her autobiographical book Swimming Studies (2012) deals with her youth as a national competitive swimmer, who made it as far as the 1988 and 1992 Canadian Olympic trials. It is a "meditation on the gruelling years of training, the ways swimming is refracted through her memory now". [5] It won the National Book Critics Circle Award (Autobiography). [6] [7]
Shapton created the "armpit sex drawing" for Spike Jonze's 2013 film Her .
Guestbook, a collection of short writings and images, was published in 2019. [8]
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