Each day from Oct. 4-8, Canada Post will unveil a new stamp commemorating one of the country’s top editorial cartoonists
Next week, Canada Post will unveil five stamps celebrating Canada’s greatest editorial cartoonists, whose thought-provoking and seminal work has helped shape the country’s national fabric over the last half-century.
Videos and stories will be shared with each unveiling with a special online roundtable discussion with the artists planned for Oct. 8.
The five award-winning cartoonists, each honoured with their own stamp, are some of our country’s best journalists and storytellers. Their powerful drawings have been important fixtures in some of Canada’s most prominent and influential newspapers for decades.
Armed with pencils, ink and razor-sharp wit, these editorial cartoonists have boiled down complex issues into a single image—providing pointed commentary on important domestic and world events. Challenging the status quo and tackling controversial subjects head-on, their work has transcended politics and played an important role in upholding Canadian democratic freedoms.
These talented Canadian artists have made us laugh, reflect and cry with cartoons that tap into the emotions of a country. Their combination of humour and art has enlightened and entertained us, contributed to the national debate and brought attention to unfairness and injustice.
They include:
- Oct. 4: Serge Chapleau, of La Presse, the winner of eight National Newspaper Awards and a Member of the Order of Canada. An annual collection of his best caricatures has been published every year since 1993. In 2004, his popular puppet character Gérard D. Laflaque was brought to life on the television satire Et Dieu créa…Laflaque.
- Oct. 5: Brian Gable, of the Globe and Mail, the winner of seven National Newspaper Awards and a Member of the Order of Canada, whose citation said his work “embodies our national sense of humour, namely our ability to laugh at ourselves and our institutions.”
- Oct. 6: Terry Mosher, of the Montreal Gazette, best known by his pen name “Aislin.” Over the last half-century, Mosher has drawn more than 14,000 cartoons, which have appeared around the world. He is an Officer of the Order of Canada and has won two National Newspaper Awards and a gold National Magazine Award. At 78, he is both a historian and an elder statesman of the craft in Canada; one of Mosher’s more than 50 books is about Duncan Macpherson’s career and influence.
- Oct. 7: Duncan Macpherson (1924-93), of the Toronto Star, one of the most influential cartoonists in Canada. The first editorial cartoonist to be invested into the Order of Canada, and winner of six National Newspaper Awards, he drew witty cartoons for three decades, challenging what he called “wrongness” on behalf of everyday Canadians. He also successfully pushed for independence from the editorial stance of his own newspaper, changing the role of the editorial cartoonists who followed him.
- Oct. 8: Bruce MacKinnon, of Halifax’s Chronicle Herald, who has won 21 Atlantic Journalism Awards, six National Newspaper Awards for editorial cartooning (and a seventh, the inaugural Journalist of the Year award) and the World Press Freedom International Editorial Cartoon Competition. His citation as a Member of the Order of Canada called him “one of Canada’s most skilled, empathetic and provocative editorial cartoonists.
The live panel discussion with the cartoonists and Ian Macpherson, Duncan’s son, will be held online on Oct. 8 at 11 a.m. (ET). Register for the webcast here. It will be moderated by Anthony Wilson-Smith, the president and CEO of Historica Canada and the chair of the Canada Post Stamp Advisory Committee.