John Kent (cartoonist)
John Kent (21 June 1937 – 14 April 2003) was a New Zealand cartoonist who is best known as the author of the erotic and satirical Varoomshka comic strip in the English newspaper The Guardian during the 1970s. [1]
Biography
Born in Oamaru, Kent was self-taught as an artist, influenced by Al Capp, creator of Li'l Abner. He worked principally in felt-tip pen on A4 paper. Kent emigrated to England in 1959, working in advertising before his Grocer Heath strip was published in Private Eye in 1969. Varoomshka appeared in The Guardian from 1969 to 1979, Kent also contributing work to The Sun, The Daily Mail, The Sunday Times and, from 1998, The Times, where his La Bimba strip showed clear echoes of the earlier Varoomshka.
Sources
- "John Kent (21 June 1937, New Zealand - 14 April 2003, UK)", Lambiek Comiclopedia.
gollark: Those are a terrible metric for anything.
gollark: How do you PORTRAY cosmic rays?
gollark: I can type 100WPM or so, so that will involve a lot of endless items.
gollark: ... no.
gollark: I should always be portrayed as speaking through some sort of remote chat thing to leave it a mystery to the audience about whether I'm a person or just a swarm of bees dressed as one with internet access, or possibly a rogue AI or, as andrew says, a probabilistic anomaly.
External links
- Michael McNay, "John Kent" obituary, The Guardian, 19 April 2003.
- Mark Bryant, Obituary from The Independent, 21 May 2003.
- Biography from British Cartoon Archive, University of Kent
- John Kent at lambiek.net
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