William Haefeli | |
---|---|
Born | August 14, 1953 Philadelphia |
Nationality | American |
Education | Duke University, Chicago Academy of Fine Arts |
Known for | Cartoonist, The New Yorker |
William Haefeli (born August 14, 1953)[1] is an American cartoonist and a staff cartoonist for The New Yorker.[2] His single-panel cartoons depict contemporary life through observational humor. Haefeli is known for a distinct graphic drawing style[3] and for incorporating gay themes into his body of work.[4]
Early Life
editHaefeli grew up on the well-to-do Philadelphia Main Line.[1] His father was an advertising copywriter and his mother a homemaker.[1] As a child, Haefeli perused The New Yorker’s cartoons, relating to their themes of that time like people commuting to work by train, going to Ivy League football games and attending cocktail parties.[1]
He graduated from Duke University in 1975 with a degree in psychology,[1] and attended the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts (1975-1977).[1]
Career
editHaefeli began his cartooning career in Chicago.[1] His first cartoon was purchased by the Saturday Review of Literature in 1978.[3] Placements in a variety of other publications followed.
Haefeli was a regular contributor to the British humor magazine Punch (The London Charivari) for five years before it ceased publication in 1992.[3] "...the dynamics of (the) Battle of the Sexes was superbly translated with savage irony by William Haefeli, one of a handful of great American cartoonists working for Punch, in what could be described as his New Man and New Woman cartoons of the 80s and 90s," wrote Andre Gailani, Manager at Punch, Ltd., in 2014.[5]
Haefeli’s first New Yorker cartoon appeared in 1998 [4] and he has continued to appear in the magazine's pages regularly since then. Bob Mankoff, The New Yorker’s Cartoon Editor from 1997 - 2017,[6] said of Haefeli, “Bill’s cartoon artistry is unsurpassed, as is the comedy of manners, mores, and morals his cartoons delineate for the gay, the straight, and everyone in between.”[7]
In 2015, Haefeli contributed the cartoons for Dan Ariely's book Irrationally Yours[8]. In 2009 he did the credit sequence for Juliet Landau's documentary short Take Flight: Gary Oldman Directs Chutzpah[9]
Personal Life
editHaefeli is openly gay.[4] He relocated to Los Angeles from Chicago in 1995 and continues to make his home in LA. [4]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e f g "Drawing on life". www.advocate.com. September 11, 2007.
- ^ "List of The New Yorker contributors". September 13, 2019 – via Wikipedia.
- ^ a b c https://afinecaseforpencils.com/post/147665343164/william-haefeli
- ^ a b c d "Meet the Artist: William Haefeli | The Cartoon Bank Blog".
- ^ https://www.gale.com/binaries/content/assets/gale-us-en/primary-sources/intl-gps/intl-gps-essays/full-ghn-contextual-essays/ghn_essay_pha_gailani1_website.pdf
- ^ "Bob Mankoff". June 11, 2019 – via Wikipedia.
- ^ "What Is the Gayest New Yorker Cartoon Ever?". www.out.com. November 30, 2015.
- ^ "Irrationally Yours". July 20, 2015.
- ^ "Take Flight: Gary Oldman Directs Chutzpah (2009) - IMDb" – via www.imdb.com.
External links
edit- Conde Nast Store - New Yorker Cartoons, Haefeli Art
- Punch Magazine - William Haefeli Cartoons
- The Cartoon Bank - Meet the Artist: William Haefeli
- Duke Magazine: The Art of the Cartoon
- Advocate - Drawing on Life
- The New Yorker Cartoon Lounge.- How We Choose Cartoon Finalists
- A Case for Pencils - William Haefeli
- Out.com - What's the Gayest New Yorker Cartoon Ever?
- New York Magazine - Eustace Tilley, Meet Brad
- Punch Magazine Archives - A Victorian Institution in the 20th Century
- The New Yorker - Keep Calm and Carry On Being Funny
- The New Yorker - Cartoon Bibles
- Cartoon Collections - Anatomy of a Cartoon
- Racial and Gender Diversity of the Characters in The New Yorker Cartoons - Proceedings of the Natural Institute of Science
- Irrationally Yours, Dan Ariely
- IMDb: Take Flight - Gary Oldman Directs Chutzpah (2009), Full Cast and Crew
- Wikipedia - List of The New Yorker Contributors