When art and politics collide

MILLERTON — Opinion Ink. That’s the name of political cartoonist Dianne Engleke’s upcoming show at the Library Annex on July 25. The exhibit will act as a showcase for her 200 cartoons that have run in The Millerton News from May 2006 through July 2010. But she started much earlier than 2006.

“I did my first one about the war in Vietnam in 1965, when at NYU, and it was published in the ‘East Village Other,’� Engleke said. “And shortly after that I left NYU and went to the Art Students League School.�

Engleke said she always “did� art, but wasn’t really encouraged when she was young.

“It was something I did for myself,� she said, adding that the cartoons are not only cathartic, but something she enjoys sharing as well. “When I do the cartoons it’s a way to raise issues that really concern me, so I consider that a different kind of art from when I paint or do pastels, which is more personal.�

Engleke said she has an “interior sensor� when composing cartoons, which she doesn’t have when working on her other artistic endeavors. She works in various mediums, including oils, pastels, pen and ink, pencils, even crayons.

But it’s her work as a political cartoonist that allows her the ability to address what’s going on in the world, and in her community. It also provided the opportunity for those thoughts to be expressed by a woman, which is equally important to her.

“One reason why I thought I needed to start doing the cartoons for The Millerton News was I thought there needed to be a woman as a protagonist for cartoons. Women needed to weigh in on the war, the environment, etc.,� she said. “And to have women week after week in cartoons seemed fun to me, not to mention to have children and animals represented in the cartoons.�

Engleke said sometimes those she’s close to make it onto the page.

“I think it’s more on the unconscious level,� she said. “Some people have mentioned it and may have noticed it and others may not, until they read this. But I think people with differing political points of view [are most interesting] and they still seem to appreciate the humor in the cartoons and they don’t feel that I am attacking them by any means.�

The subjects she chooses to address usually speak to her, because she doesn’t hear them being spoken about elsewhere.

“Usually it’s something I think is under-represented in the mass media that is not being spoken about� Engleke said, giving the timetable of withdrawing from Afghanistan as an example.

As far as whether people will be affected by the work, or whether they will take action as a result of it, Engleke said she’s realistic.

“I don’t have any illusions about it,� she said. “But the presence of the cartoon is more possibly going to affect change than the absence of it, and action is better than no action.�

The cartoons, none of which are the originals, will be mounted and hung throughout the library annex, and available for sale; all proceeds will go to the library.

After this show ends on July 31, it will be on exhibit at the David Gavin Salon building at Railroad Plaza for the week of Aug. 7 to Aug. 13. Opinion Ink will run at the Library Annex on Century Boulevard from July 25 to July 31, from noon to 5 p.m., with the exception of Monday, July 26, when the annex will be closed.

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