Denise Dorrance

Denise Dorrance is an American-born cartoonist and illustrator who publishes under the name Dorrance.

Born in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, she moved to New York in her early twenties where she worked in the fashion department of Cosmopolitan magazine, later moved into photography, and eventually ran Magnum Photos corporate photography division. In 1992 she moved to London and, in spite of herself, began a successful career as a cartoonist and book illustrator.

In 2013 a collection of her cartoons was published by Idlewild, titled "It's All About Mimi". Mimi's is the story of a woman trying to balance life as a fashionista and a mother - and considering Mimi's desire for minimalism and all things chic, it doesn't come naturally!

Her sharply ironic work appears regularly in magazines and newspapers such as The Spectator, Red, The Sunday Times and others. 'Mimi by Dorrance' ran as a weekly humorous cartoon for The Mail on Sunday's "You" magazine, and she illustrated a weekly syndicated column for News Life Media in Australia.

A range of Dorrance greeting cards is published worldwide by UK Greetings and Mint publishing.

Dorrance is married to documentary filmmaker Paul Yule, with whom she has a son.

Books

  • Fifty is not a Four-Letter Word (2007) by Linda Kelsey - Illustrator
  • A Red Dress, and Other Poems (2008) by Liz Cowley - Illustrator
  • Single Mother on the Verge (2009) by Maria Roberts - Illustrator
  • The Virginia Monologues (2009) by Virginia Ironside - Illustrator
  • Talking about Jane Austen in Baghdad (2010) by Bee Rowlatt & May Witwit - Illustrator
  • The Summer Season (2011) by Julia Williams - Illustrator
  • Women of a Dangerous Age (2012) by Fanny Blake - Illustrator
  • Civil Society at the Crossroads (2012) NGO comic strip with N.D. Mazin - Illustrator
  • "It's All About Mimi" (2013) by Dorrance
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gollark: A chemically powered toaster would effectively just be a mildly regulated flamethrower.
gollark: Perhaps an electrical toaster isn't a great idea and we could use a CHEMICAL toaster!
gollark: No, those take 3 minutes according to you.
gollark: It wouldn't work in a second, probably a minute or so at best.


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