Writers Group Logo
 
Providing quality content to newspapers, magazines
and electronic media worldwide.

border
Columns and Features Comics Editorial Cartoons Newsweek En Espanol Syndication and One-Shots Reprint Permissions Contact Us
   
SEARCH:
border
  Editorial Cartoons  
 
  Signe Wilkinson  
Subscribe to this Feature

Purchase a Reprint

View Recent Work

Search by Subject

Find Signe Wilkinson
on Facebook


 







 
 
  divider  
  Left-leaning bite that makes readers think -- as soon as they stop laughing. Pulitzer winner. Three times a week.  
       
 
Lisa Benson

Signe Wilkinson was featured in a recent Washington Post article about the art of drawing caricatures. Read it here.

Signe Wilkinson was born in the depths of the baby boom and graduated from her suburban Philadelphia high school about the same year the SAT scores began their slide. After acquiring a BA in English from a western university of middling academic reputation, Wilkinson was unprepared for real work ... so she became a reporter, stringing for the West Chester (PA) Daily Local News. She also worked for the Quakers, the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, and with a housing project in Cyprus, a job that ended with a bang when a coup d'etat was followed by a military invasion from Turkey. Since then, Wilkinson has felt that a little multi-culturalism goes a long way.

Back in the newsroom, Wilkinson began drawing the people she was supposed to be reporting on. She realized cartooning combined her interests in art and politics without taxing her interest in spelling. After a year of remedial art school, including a stint at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, she began freelancing at several Philadelphia and New York publications, finally landing a full-time job at the San Jose Mercury News in 1982. After 3 1/2 years on a steep learning curve, Wilkinson repaid her long-suffering Mercury News editor by taking a job at the Philadelphia Daily News, where she has been drawing contentedly ever since.

In addition to her five cartoons a week for the Daily News, Wilkinson has drawn mulch-based cartoons for Organic Gardening magazine, mortarboard-based cartoons for the Institute for Research on Higher Education and water-based cartoons for the University Barge Club newsletter. "How to Grow the $735 Tomato" is the title of her 1999 gardening calendar. She illustrated Mike McGrath's "You Bet Your Tomatoes", re-issued in 2008,
and "Mike McGrath's Book of Compost." She also contributed to the cartoon collection "Sex and Sensibility," which was published in 2008 by Twelve and edited by Liza Donnelly. Her awards include the 1992 Pulitzer Prize, the Robert F. Kennedy Journalism Award in 2008 and 2002, the 1991 Berryman Award and 2006, 2002 and 1997 Overseas Press Club Award. Her most cherished honor was being named "the Pennsylvania state vegetable substitute" by the speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1989.

With her expert sense of timing, Wilkinson thought a recession and newspaper depression would be a good time to
launch a daily comic strip. "Family Tree" debuted in 2008 and follows a family's loopy attempts to live green in modern, chemically dependent America.

Wilkinson was the 1994-1995 president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists, a job Molly Ivins once likened to running a nursery school. Wilkinson values her intensely unremarkable family life which is marked by her interest in growing outdoor lilies, killing indoor orchids, finding an easy way to match her husband's socks and trying to figure out the best way to answer the question, "Mom--exactly what's so funny about hiking the Appalachian Trail?"


 
divider
Copyright 2010, Washington Post Writers Group, 1150 15th St., NW, Washington, D.C. 20071
divider