Rayma Suprani

Rayma Suprani is a Venezuelan cartoonist who was dismissed by the newspaper El Universal in 2014, reportedly for drawing a cartoon mocking the late president Hugo Chávez. While Chávez loyalists have had harsh words for her criticism of the regime, others have praised her for her “distinctive powers of observation” and “fine intelligence.”[1]

Rayma Suprani
NationalityVenezuelan
EducationCentral University of Venezuela
OccupationCartoonist, activist
Websitehttps://www.raymasuprani.com/

The critic Alfonso Molina praised her work writing“the work of Rayma Suprani in El Universal unites intelligence, sensitivity and talent to express our life as a country through very sharp vignettes that are not intended to make us laugh but to make us think. Journalist and cartoonist, she manages to communicate her ideas in a very personal way, but always with a collective sense.”[2]

Early life and education

Suprani began painting as a teenager and trained for several years in the workshop of Pedro Centeno Vallenilla. When she took up cartooning, she gave up painting for a long time.[1]

She graduated from the Central University of Venezuela.[1]

Career

At a very early age, she began to work for the journal Economics Today. After working at El Diario de Caracas, she became the principal cartoonist at El Universal.[1] Suprani was El Universal's chief cartoonist for 19 years.[3] Rayma’s cartoons “have been rejected as racist and classist by countless government supporters” and have “often depicted chavistas as overgrown, brutish gorilla-like figures in red shirts, chained to their political party in shackles.”[4]

Art exhibition

In 2012, having returned to large-format work, Suprani held her first solo exhibition, “Frente al espejo” (Facing the Mirror), at the Galería D’Museo del Centro de Arte Los Galpones de Los Dos Caminos.[1] A writer for El Universal noted that Suprani's canvases displayed “the same critical spirit that has characterized her drawings and cartoons from the beginning. Scathing, sometimes. Ironic, sometimes. Corrosive, almost always.”[5] “It is another Rayma Suprani,” wrote Alfonso Molina about the exhibition. The paintings, he maintained, represented “a demonstration of strength and courage that excited me, showed me another side of the same creator.”[2]

Other activities

Suprani has also drawn magazine covers, and the best of her cartoons have been collected in books.[6]

Dismissal

According to the Guardian, her last cartoon, published in El Universal on September 17, 2014, “showed a normal-looking electrocardiogram under the heading 'Health', and below it the late former president Hugo Chávez's signature merging with a flatlining heartbeat under the words 'Health in Venezuela'.” The cartoon, wrote the Guardian, “combined two nationally sensitive subjects: the legacy of Chávez, and the socialist government's management of the healthcare system.”[7]

The Guardian noted that medical personnel had “long claimed the economic chaos engulfing the country has led to chronic shortages of drugs and medical supplies,” and further pointed out that since Chávez's death the previous year, “his signature, always printed in red, has become a symbol of loyalty to the leader....It has been stamped across buildings and can often be seen tattooed on the arms of his supporters.”[7]

Only hours after the publication of the cartoon, Suprani was fired. “My immediate boss called me and told me he didn't like my caricature and I was out,” she said. “We've become a country where if you say things, have your own criteria and try to provoke reflection, it's not well viewed.” The Guardian stated that El Universal had recently been sold to “a little-known Spanish company called Epalistica, which employees at the newspaper allege is a front for a pro-government group of investors,” and that since the sale, the paper had shifted from an anti-government stance to a more government-friendly stance, resulting in the dismissal or resignation of several columnists.[7] The newspaper El Tiempo also stated that since its change of ownership, El Universal had become more pro-government. “The government has gone and bought the news media that it can't silence,” Suprani said in an interview on Unionradio, noting the government's previous acquisition of Globovisión and of the newspapers that had formerly belonged to Cadena Capriles.[3]

After the news of her dismissal was reported, Henrique Capriles and other opposition figures responded to Suprani's dismissal by tweeting their respect for her.[3] Suprani herself wrote on Twitter that “we will carry on through other, smaller avenues but with endless creativity.”[7]

Suprani was scheduled to speak at the Oslo Freedom Forum in May 2015.[8]

Personal life

Suprani has three dogs, Lucy, Blue and Churchill, and a cat named Osho.[1]

gollark: I think it would just mean your IQ was many standard deviations below average.
gollark: <@654529613560807444> It means profile picture.
gollark: Except possibly the copyright-striking people.
gollark: YouTube has to somewhat-satisfy users, copyright holders and/or trolls, at least twenty different governments, advertisers, and people who make videos, but doesn't do well for any of them in some ways.
gollark: The time of giannises was very confusing.

References

  1. Mendoza, Alejandro Celedon. "Rayma Suprani: "Digo todo lo que pienso"". Revista Etiqueta. Archived from the original on 2015-05-18.
  2. "LA IRREVERENCIA DE CARLOS ZERPA". Noticiero Digital.
  3. Martiz, Valentina Lares (Sep 18, 2014). "La caricatura por la que despidieron a Rayma de El Universal". El Tiempo.
  4. Dutka, ZC (Oct 1, 2014). "Fired Political Cartoonist Claims Censorship in Venezuela, Colleagues Weigh In". Venezuela Analysis.
  5. "Rayma Suprani le imprime ahora su humor al lienzo". El Universal. Feb 1, 2012.
  6. Martinez, Belibert Ramirez (Jan 18, 2014). "En Clave de Sir / Su habilidad para llegar a la gente los convirtió en marca". Guanipa Noticias.
  7. "Venezuelan cartoonist 'fired' over healthcare satire". The Guardian. Sep 18, 2014.
  8. "Rayma Suprani". Oslo Freedom Forum.
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