John Cuneo (illustrator) explained

John Cuneo
Birth Date:January 4, 1957
Birth Place:Westfield, New Jersey, US
Field:Illustration

John Cuneo (born January 4, 1957) is an American illustrator whose work has appeared in publications, including The New Yorker, Esquire, Sports Illustrated and The Atlantic Monthly. His ink and watercolor drawings have been described as covering everything from politics to sex.[1]

Early life and education

Cuneo grew up in Westfield, New Jersey. His father worked as a manager at a plant nursery and his mother as a house wife.[2] He was the oldest of three boys.[3] He and his two brothers worked at the nursery with his father and take home produce to sell at a stand on their front lawn. At the age of 14, he learned to draw from a neighbor, Adelaide Johnson.[3]

Cuneo attended Roosevelt Jr. High, followed by Westfield High School until his junior year, when his family moved to Florida. Once in Florida, Cuneo would graduate from Lely High School in Naples, Florida, in 1975 and go on to attend Florida State University for one year, followed by Colorado Institute of Art for an additional year.[4]

At Colorado Institute for Art, Cuneo learned graphic design business skills, including paste-ups with wax, making storyboards, and rendering typefaces. Bill Kastan, a local illustrator as well as an instructor at the school, befriended Cuneo and provided him with a drawing table in his studio and helped him put together a portfolio.[2]

In 1977, while in Denver, Cuneo joined a group of freelance illustrators headed by Joe Malone going under the name of No Coast Graphics, where he did freelance illustrations for The Denver Post as well as Westword.[5] It was also in Denver where Cuneo met his wife Jan Larson.[2]

Illustration career

Cuneo moved from Denver to San Francisco in 1986, and it was there that he decided to devote himself entirely to work in editorial illustration. His first published work for a major magazine appeared in Sierra Magazine, under the art direction of Martha Geering. In 1993, Cuneo returned to Denver and remained there for eight years. After his return to Denver, Cuneo began receiving assignments from Entertainment Weekly.

In 2001, Cuneo and his wife moved to Woodstock, New York. Soon after, John Korpics, design director at Esquire, brought in Cuneo in 2002 to publish a series of comics called Damned Good Advice, which ran until 2003,[6] and to illustrate the magazine's sex advice column, which ran until 2014.[7] Work on the sex column for Esquire led to two silver awards for Cuneo from the Society of Illustrators.

Cuneo's "Flu Season" appeared on the October 26, 2009 issue of The New Yorker.[8] His second cover for The New Yorker, "Dog Meets Dog", which ran on the June 27, 2011 issue and art directed by Francoise Mouly, won the Hamilton King Award in 2012.[9] [10] Cuneo's August 5, 2013 New Yorker cover featured Anthony Weiner straddling the top of the Empire State Building.[11] That cover led to a silver medal from the Society of Illustrators. In total,, Cuneo has created ten covers for the New Yorker.[12]

In 2010, Cuneo joined Golf Digest at the Masters Tournament to draw on location and record his impressions of the event.[13] He is a regular contributor to Golf Digest.[14]

Books

In 2004, Steven Guarnaccia, who was head of the illustration department at Parsons, recommended Cuneo's sketchbooks to Fantagraphics. Editor Eric Reynolds got in touch to discuss compiling some of the sketchbook work into a book. Robert Festino, who Cuneo had worked with at Entertainment Weekly, put together a dummy of a book during his off-hours at the Entertainment Weekly offices. The mockup was sent to Fantagraphics and co-publisher Kim Thompson went ahead with plans to publish nEuROTIC. The cover illustration chosen for the book had previously won a gold medal from the Society of Illustrators, and the book was released in 2007, designed and art directed by Robert Festino.[15]

Ten years after nEuROTIC, Gary Groth, publisher at Fantagraphics, suggested a sequel to Cuneo. While nEuRoTIC had been drawn almost entirely using a Rapidograph, the pieces in the new collection for Not Waving But Drawing were created using a Uni-ball roller pen or a Micron pen.[16] The book was released in 2017.[17]

In 2017, Cuneo illustrated the book Who Is Rich?, authored by Matthew Klam, published By Random House.[18]

Fantagraphics published Cuneo's third collection of sketchbook drawings in 2021. Coping Skills[19] was described by New Yorker art editor Françoise Mouly as "scabrous and depraved" in nature.[20]

Group exhibitions

Awards

Society of illustrators

Society of Illustrators, San Francisco

Others

Personal life

The artist lives in Woodstock, New York, with his wife Jan. The couple have one son, Jack Cuneo.[3]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Our Artists. Fantagraphics. 2020-06-03.
  2. Web site: John Cuneo. Communication Arts. Ellen. Shapiro. 2010-05-29.
  3. Web site: Illustrator Profile – John Cuneo. 2016-06-25. Robert. Newman. American Illustration.
  4. Web site: Interview with John Cuneo . 2020-08-23.
  5. Web site: Denver Entertainment. 2000-07-27. Bill. Husted. Denver Post.
  6. Web site: Esquire Archives. Esquire. 2020-05-29.
  7. Web site: Esquire. 2014-03-17.
  8. Web site: October 26, 2009. Flu Season. New Yorker.
  9. Web site: John Cuneo Hamilton King Winner 2012. 2020-05-30. Society of Illustrators.
  10. Web site: Hamilton King Award. 2010-01-10. Irene. Gallo.
  11. Web site: The New Yorker Gets In on the Act. Thomas. Kaplan. The New York Times. 2013-07-26.
  12. John Cuneo's "To Fetch or Not to Fetch". 2019-04-29. Françoise. Mouly. The New Yorker.
  13. Web site: Editor's Letter: Masters Cartooning and the Last Laugh. 2018-04-03. Jerry. Tarde. Golf Digest.
  14. Web site: Contributors. Golf Digest. 2020-06-03.
  15. Web site: A Short Interview With John Cuneo. 2007-03-17. Tom. Spurgeon.
  16. Gil Roth. 2017-03-27. 211. John Cuneo. 16:05.
  17. Web site: Not Waving But Drawing. 2020-06-05. Fantagraphics.
  18. Web site: Who Is Rich.
  19. Web site: Coping Skills. 2021-03-18. Fantagtaphics.
  20. John Cuneo's "The Polar Opposite". 2021-03-01. Françoise. Mouly. .
  21. Web site: State of the Art:Illustration 100 Years After Howard Pyle. 2020-05-30.
  22. Web site: Illustrators 58. 2020-05-30.