DC -- Newseum -- Exhibits -- (3) The Pulitzer Prize-Winning Editorial Cartoons of Darrin Bell:
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Description of Pictures: The Pulitzer Prize-Winning Editorial Cartoons of Darrin Bell
“If even one person runs my cartoon, I’m happy with that as long as what I’m saying becomes part of the conversation.” — Darrin Bell
Freelance cartoonist Darrin Bell won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for his sharp take on political hypocrisy, race and injustice. He is the first African American to win a Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning.
Bell started his career at age 20 as staff editorial cartoonist at the University of California-Berkeley’s The Daily Californian in 1995. He sold his editorial cartoons to the Los Angeles Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. Bell turned to comic strips with “Rudy Park” in 1997 and “Candorville” in 2003, both syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.
In 2013, spurred by the trial of George Zimmerman, who was acquitted in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, a black teen killed in Florida in 2012, Bell again started penning editorial cartoons, this time as a side job. “I got back into editorial cartooning to say something,” said Bell. “Not to make money.”
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NDBELL_190928_001.JPG: The Pulitzer Prize-Winning
Editorial Cartoons of Darrin Bell
2019
Freelance cartoonist Darrin Bell won the 2019 Pulitzer Prize for his sharp take on political hypocrisy, race and injustice. He is the first African American to win a Pulitzer Prize for editorial cartooning.
Bell started his career at age 20 as staff editorial cartoonist at the University of California-Berkeley's The Daily Californian in 1995. He sold his editorial cartoons to the Los Angeles Times and the San Francisco Chronicle. Bell turned to comic strips with "Rudy Park" in 1997 and "Candorville" in 2003, both syndicated by The Washington Post Writers Group.
In 2013, spurred by the trial of George Zimmerman, who was acquitted in the shooting death of Trayvon Martin, a black teen killed in Florida in 2012, Bell again started penning editorial cartoons, this time as a side job. "I got back into editorial cartooning to say something," said Bell. "Not to make money."
"If even one person runs my cartoon, I'm happy with that," said Bell, "as long as what I'm saying becomes part of the conversation."
NDBELL_190928_019.JPG: Race in America
From police brutality against African Americans to voter suppression, Bell's work dissected race and racism in America. "There is basically one theme I approach with my work: human dignity and the denial of it," he said. It was also why he took up editorial cartooning again in 2013 as a side job to drawing his syndicated comic strips.
NDBELL_190928_028.JPG: Police shot a black man in his own home through his garage door
One Cent -- Shut up about NFL players kneeling
A jury decided his life was worth four of these
NDBELL_190928_031.JPG: Make America Great Again
Make College White Again
NDBELL_190928_042.JPG: "Hello 911, I'd like to report someone sketching people without a permit."
NDBELL_190928_044.JPG: "This one I drew after a woman called 911 on a little girl who was just selling water. I have a daughter, and when that happened, I just imagined someone calling the police on my sweet little girl for trying to sell water so she can go to Disneyland. It made me want to cry. I was in a cafe and I looked up, and someone in the cafe was looking at me like I was suspicious."
-- Cartoonist Darrin Bell
NDBELL_190928_047.JPG: Hot-Button Issues
Bell is unafraid to confront polarizing issues, including the hearings for Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh, the environment and gun control. Often, inspiration strikes closer to home. "I usually get my ideas the night before," said Bell. "I come home from work, I put my 2-year-old daughter to bed and my 5-year-old son to bed, and I lie there with him and we have conversations about what's unfair in the world."
NDBELL_190928_055.JPG: It wouldn't matter if Brett Kavanaugh DID sexually assault that girl. He was 17! NO man should be held responsible for a sexual assault he committed at 17!
NDBELL_190928_063.JPG: "I'm just saying, a few more adjectives in the second amendment couldn't hurt."
NDBELL_190928_067.JPG: Trump-Russia Investigations
Investigations of the ties between the Trump presidential campaign and Russia have transfixed the nation, dominating the news since 2016. Bell brought news stories about President Donald Trump's relationship with Russian President Vladimir Putin and Trump's derision of special prosecutor Robert Mueller into sharp relief.
NDBELL_190928_072.JPG: Stormy Daniels... Anyone who sells their body has no credibility.
NDBELL_190928_085.JPG: Foreign Affairs
Bell's cartoons covered such international events in 2018 as President Donald Trump's tweet declaring the war against ISIS was over and historic meeting with North Korea's authoritarian leader Kim Jung Un. After the murder of journalist Jamal Khashoggi in the Saudi Consulate in Turkey, Bell depicted Trump on a comic book cover as a groveling servant of Saudi Arabia's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, whom the CIA says ordered the killing.
NDBELL_190928_088.JPG: It is MADNESS for Trump to end our undeclared war in Syria.
Where would the world be if we went around ending all our Endless Wars?
NDBELL_190928_098.JPG: "People who I think are really bad actors are typically fun to draw because their personality tends to shape how they look. So it's fun to draw Trump. I love drawing Kim Jung-Un."
-- Cartoonist Darrin Bell
NDBELL_190928_106.JPG: Immigration
Immigration policies and a surge of migrants at the U.S. southern border captured headlines in 2018. Most polarizing was the policy of separating migrant children from their parents. One of Bell's favorite cartoons tackles this issue; A stained-glass window shows the Madonna and child with President Trump's hands reaching for the baby Jesus. "It's the simplest way for people to understand the issue [separating children from their parents at the border], especially those that consider themselves Christian," said Bell of this cartoon.
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2019 photos: Equipment this year: I continued to use my Fuji XS-1 cameras but, depending on the event, I also used a Nikon D7000.
Trips this year:
a four-day jaunt to Massachusetts (Boston, Stockbridge, and Springfield) to experience rain in another state,
Asheville, NC to visit Dad and his wife Dixie,
four trips to New York City (including the United Nations, Flushing, and the New York Comic-Con), and
my 14th consecutive San Diego Comic-Con (including sites in Utah).
Number of photos taken this year: about 582,000.
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