Posts Tagged ‘The New Yorker’

This entry is part 19 of 28 in the series magazine covers

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“Life in the Cuba of Tomorrow” by Bruce McCall 

“I love Cuban cigars, and this sways me more than it should,” McCall says of his own feelings toward the country. “The island’s history—Spanish exploitation, then American exploitation, then the dismal Castro era—is tragic, but Cuban musicians and artists still rule, attesting to an unquenchable creative impulse that has thrived amid all forms of chaos.”

previous covers inspired by momentous events in Cuba:

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“On the Beach,” by R. Sikoryak, January 26, 1998.

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“Fading,” by Ana Juan, March 3, 2008.

This entry is part 18 of 28 in the series magazine covers

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by Christoph Niemann

The New Yorker

Posted: 7th February 2015 by socomic in Comic & Book Covers
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This entry is part 17 of 28 in the series magazine covers

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A Walk in the Snow by Mark Ulriksen

The snowfall last week may have fallen short of the “storm of the century” or “snowmageddon” predictions,  at least in New York City, but for city dwellers and their canine companions it was enough for a snow day, as portrayed in this week’s cover, by Mark Ulriksen.

In his recently published book, “Dogs Rule Nonchalantly,” Ulriksen explains his predilection for painting man’s best friend: “Dogs give you their undivided attention,” he writes. “They watch your every gesture, read your every emotion, listen attentively to every word you say—until they hear the rustle of a bag of chips being opened.” Or, in the winter after a snowstorm, until you open the door to go outside.

 

via:newyorker

This entry is part 16 of 28 in the series magazine covers

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“Limited Visibility’ by Jorge Colombo, who drew this cover on an iPad

 “It was a very foggy night, and the Empire State building kept appearing and disappearing—it was like a beacon, in and out of view. In Manhattan, if you’re ever lost, you sort of look for that spire of the Empire State Building and guide yourself where you’re going—it’s the quickest reference point. So it was very disorienting, standing there and seeing it appear and disappear. I thought, ‘Where am I painting?’ It was like a ghost ship in the middle of the sea.”

via:newyorker

The New Yorker

Posted: 3rd January 2015 by socomic in Comic & Book Covers
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This entry is part 14 of 28 in the series magazine covers

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“dance around a piano” by Jean-Jacques Sempé

via:newyorker

This entry is part 13 of 28 in the series magazine covers

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 1971, Arthur Getz

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1927, Andre De Schaub

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 1984, Anne Burgess

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 1984, Iris Van Rynbach

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 1986, William Steig

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1986, Iris Van Rynbach

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2007, Joost Swarte

by the newyorker’s archive

The New Yorker

Posted: 8th December 2014 by socomic in Comic & Book Covers
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This entry is part 12 of 28 in the series magazine covers

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“Even though I secretly aspire to a de-cluttered apartment, the lower one pictured is what I identify with,” Ivan Brunetti said about this week’s cover. “I know that the dense remnants of the twentieth century can now be fitted into a few small devices; yet in my so-called real life, I have continually accumulated more and more impedimenta, trappings, and just plain stuff.” via:thenewyorker

 

The New Yorker

Posted: 8th November 2014 by socomic in Comic & Book Covers
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This entry is part 10 of 28 in the series magazine covers

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by Chris Ware via:newyorker

” The voice in my mind nagged me all through October: “Get your flu shots.” An otherwise fairly responsible parent, I was for some reason late to the inoculation party this year, a tardiness for which I had no real excuse, especially amid the Dallas Ebola scare, which sent me and my wife to our iPhones for the latest news when we should have been paying closer attention to more mundane matters of family health. But the real-life Hollywood movie appeared to have been green-lit, filming as we watched: the government was bumbling, the Dallas hospital was ass-covering, guys in yellow suits were disinfecting doorways in the middle of the night, parents were pulling their children out of school, protocols were being breached, caution was abundant, and soon, surely, we’d all be fogging our safety goggles and duct-taping ourselves into homemade Hefty-bag hazmat suits to fight over potable water, probably even here in Oak “