Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - August 1, 2024, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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THURSDAY AUGUST 1, 2024 ● ARTS & LIFE EDITOR: JILL WILSON 204-697-7018 ● ARTS@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
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Chris Chuckry’s cartoons cover the political spectrum
Drawing inspiration from the left, right and wrong
F
OR most of his life, Chris Chuckry has
been called an artist. At his father’s fu-
neral, he was identified differently.
“I was introduced to someone as the car-
toonist,” says Chuckry, whose father, Harry
— a longtime schoolteacher who later in life
became a priest — died last month at the age
of 88.
It’s a badge Chuckry wears with pride. After
decades working as a comic book artist, graph-
ic novel colourist and illustrator, Chuckry, who
draws from a riverside home studio in Elm
Park, was inspired by the outlandish, unbeliev-
able circumstances of the COVID-19 pandemic
to combine his artistic skill set and his sense of
collective ethics.
He became a political cartoonist because the
line between democracy and lunacy was so fre-
quently blurred in both the Canadian House of
Commons and in the common Canadian home.
As toilet paper was stacked and stowed,
while politicians blathered and bickered and as
truckers took a misguided and overlong pitstop
down yonder on Broadway, Chuckry sharpened
his pencil and got to work.
“I was looking for a new daily art practice,
and let’s just say I was frustrated with how the
pandemic was being handled,” he told the Free
Press in September 2021.
Bam! Overnight, the mild-mannered,
middle-aged father and college art instruc-
tor became an invaluable source of insight,
unexpected laughter and shared catharsis to a
growing legion of social media followers, dis-
tilling the sloppy trough of news of the day into
single panels marked by a transparent sense of
left, right and downright wrong.
Now, four years after first donning the polit-
ical cartoonist’s cape, 54 pieces of Chuckry’s
locally, nationally and internationally inspired
artwork is on display at the Cre8ery gallery
(125 Adelaide St.) as part of a solo exhibition
called Politically Drawn.
It’s his third show at the gallery, but the first
to feature only his cartoon work. Everything is
available for purchase.
Since starting his side gig, Chuckry esti-
mates he’s drawn over 600 individual cartoons,
posting them for free while developing a
progressive and progressing reflection of four
years of political developments.
Of his output, Chuckry says, “I’m no Michael
de Adder,” referencing the nationally syndicat-
ed, Moncton-based cartoonist.
But Chuckry is being modest. He has been
there to outline in ink his view of key political
events. Bungled vaccine rollouts? — you bet.
Contentious party leadership races? — yes
sir. Inattentive drivers blaming cyclists for
injuries they themselves caused? — uh huh.
Pierre? He’s there. Heather? Roger that. Putin?
Chuckry’s output has been steady as the Volga.
Chuckry has also continued his other work,
teaching part-time at Red River Polytechnic.
“The comic book work keeps me busy. I’m
working on a series called Tin Can Society for
Image Comics. It’s a murder mystery where
the main character has spina bifida and be-
comes a hero. It looks gorgeous,” he says.
“I’m also working on another project called
Sacred Creatures about the seven deadly sins
made real as humans who walk amongst us.”
This summer, Chuckry has been spending
a great deal of time with his family, relaxing
last weekend at a cottage rental in Sandy Bay.
But since joining the ranks of Arch Dale, Dale
Cummings and Peter Kuch as Manitoban
political cartoonists, Chuckry’s learned an
eternally relevant lesson: politics never takes a
holiday, even if politicians do.
ben.waldman@winnipegfreepress.com
BEN WALDMAN
MIKE DEAL / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES
Artist Chris Chuckry turned his focus to political cartoons during the pandemic.
The veteran comic book artist and illustrator decided to funnel his frustrations into timely topics.
GALLERY PREVIEW
POLITICALLY DRAWN
Chris Chuckry
● The Cre8ery, 125 Adelaide St.
● Tuesday to Saturday, 11 a.m. to 5 p.m.
● Through Aug. 6
● Meet the artist Aug. 2 (11 a.m.-9 p.m.); Aug. 3 (1-4 p.m.)
;