Categories
Blog

Come See Daryl Cagle in Knoxville and St. Just le Martel!

I will crawl out of my spider hole for two events!  Come see me!

I’ll be speaking, and giving a Powerpoint presentation, to the Southeast Chapter of the National Cartoonists Society (NCS) in Knoxville, TN on Saturday, October 26th, at about 11:00am, at the Crowne Plaza Knoxville (University), in Salon B on the mezzanine level.  The NCS chapter folks tell me that anyone can come, so here is your chance to tell me off face to face, no hiding behind those nasty e-mails.

affiche web

I’m impressed with the NCS Southeast Chapter, they put on an ambitious gathering and have a lot of cartooning luminaries in their ranks.  I’m looking forward to it.

Next week I’m going to the big, international, editorial cartooning convention in St. Just le Martel, France.  This is a little town that has decided that they love editorial cartoons – they built an impressive cartoon museum and the whole town comes out in wholehearted support of our troubled art form. They also love cows; this is French cow country, down by Limoges.

Three of the cartoonists I syndicate are coming along, Pat Bagley of the Salt Lake Tribune, Steve Sack of the Minneapolis Star-Tribune, and Bob Englehart of the Hartford Courant.  I think this will be the biggest American turnout that little St. Just has ever had.  And none of us speak French.  Here is a list of all the attending editorial cartoonists, and the days that they will be in attendance.

So, if there are any editorial cartooning fans in France who want to visit with some obscure, American editorial cartoonists, the four of us will be hanging with all the other world cartoonists at the cartoon museum the second weekend of the Salon, October 4th, 5th and 6th.

Categories
Blog

Cagle in Nashville

I’ve been off the grid for a few days, driving my car to Nashville, Tennessee, which is a pretty foreign place.  I’m struggling to set up my apartment here.  My wife got a teaching job at Vanderbilt University and I’m coming along as a good spouse.  I can draw cartoons anywhere.  Here are some first reactions to Nashville …

The newspaper, Gannett’s “The Tennessean” is little, light and slight – like a ghost of what it surely once was.  I can crumple the whole newspaper into a little ball with one hand.  I saw bigger, thicker, healthier looking newspapers in smaller towns on the drive out.  On newstands I see an altie paper called, “The City Paper” with a black front cover and reversed type displaying the headline “Why Nashville Needs Newspapers.”  I arrived for “The City Paper’s” angst-filled last issue as they are going out of business.

I’m in a giant apartment building in “Germantown” which is near downtown, and seems to be newly gentrified with yuppies and lots of construction of other, giant apartment buildings like mine.  There are plenty of payday loan/check cashing stores, bail bondsmen, fast food fried chicken and a dearth of supermarkets here, so the gentrification has a way to go.  I guess it’s fine.

My apartment has a view of a truck yard with rusty roofs and burly men who work very hard washing and loading heavy construction equipment onto trucks.  It is a view I would have enjoyed when I was five years old.

photo88 Cagle in Nashville cartoons

This is the view of the truck yard from my apartment window. Click and you can see all the details.

I also have a view of impressive thunderstorms, which seem to pass through here every day.  As I write this, there are booms of thunder.  The humidity is fantastic; I feel like I’m swimming everywhere.  And the plants are all healthy.  Even the weeds that battle with the concrete and asphalt are a healthy, bright green.  When the zombie apocalypse comes, the plants will claim Nashville back from the concrete in just a few months.

In California, the weeds look unhealthy.  When I neglect my lawn in California, it turns into a blotchy beige.  Here, when people don’t tend their lawns, the lawns just get bigger and bushier and even more bright green.  This place really wants to grow.  I’ve read that this is the worst place in America for hay fever.

I’ve spent my life as an urbanite living around New York or Southern California, so there is some culture shock.  People here are unusually friendly.  There seems to be a lot of smokers here.  There are certainly a lot more trucks and ads for gun shows.  Everyone wants to recommend restaurants to us, and the recommended restaurants are really quite good.

There is a music theme to this place, with guitar logos everywhere.  There’s a huge, ugly, convention center that looks like it is styled after a colossal guitar.  The music is a part of the culture that I don’t really understand or appreciate, but I can ignore the music.  I guess I can ignore the truck yard too.  It is harder to ignore the fried chicken.