Ridicule, Fine, But Keep Them Human

Marc Simont, 94 — courtly, wry, slim as a Ticonderoga No. 2 — is in his studio, drawing. He’s sketched a lone figure piloting a tug boat, the ship of state, heading out to sea. All might go swimmingly but for a gigantic concrete anchor chained to the tug and  mired in river muck labeled GOP.

   Simont has been expressing his political ire on The Lakeville Journal’s editorial pages since Stevenson lost to Eisenhower in 1952. He’s illustrated children’s books (for which he won a Caldecott prize), created murals in public places and collaborated on many books including several with Cornwall neighbor James Thurber after the writer and humorist quit drawing.

   Now Simont has published “The Beautiful Planet: Ours To Lose,â€� mostly merciless drawings of mostly American figures, from Richard Nixon to George W., all at their terrifying worst.

   Early in the book, a drawing of General Creighton W. Abrams has the commander of the Vietnam War seated at a table, pleased with his kill rate of 10 to 1. “In our favor.â€� To his right is heaped 10 mangled bodies. To his left lies one.

   “I’m not that emotional by the time I sit down to draw,â€� Simont told me during an interview last weekend. “The emotion has already happened. Now I have to put it all down in an individual way.â€�

   Several drawings in the book see President George W. Bush as a Wild West sheriff, imagining what John Wayne would do in a situation like this.

   “Having no experience in war, himself,â€� Simont said of Bush the younger, “he made himself into a movie general,â€� and sometimes as a crusader drawn by Simont in chainmail, crowned and with a cross on his chest.

   “To keep pace with history’s all-time greats,â€� Simont wrote, “G.W. Bush had to win some wars.â€�

   A wonderful cartoon, technically and viscerally, pictures a careering Wolfowitz along with Cheney, Rumsfeld and W., each pursuing war in Iraq for his own reasons.

   “These guys were going to finish what the first President Bush had the intelligence not to carry out,â€� Simont explained.

   “Drawing people you don’t like is often a problem, because you might make them look like villains. You end up dehumanizing them, and then your observations are not taken seriously.â€�

   The idea is to ridicule, not dehumanize, and ridicule them Simont does.

   He can also make his characters chillingly repugnant, like the drawing of Lehman Bros. chairman Richard S. Fuld telling Congress “We did the best we could, given the information we had.â€� Fuld, dark-eyed, drawn, is seated, his hands clawing a mountain of cash around his body.

   Marking the publication of “The Beautiful Planet: Ours To Lose,â€�an exhibit of Marc Simont’s political cartoons will be on view at Noble Horizons in the Learning Center Gallery March 6 through 28. An opening reception is scheduled there from 2 to 4 p.m., March 14. For information, call Caroline Burchfield at 860-435-9851 x 190.

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