A couple of high school teachers (names long forgotten):
Driver Ed Teacher as rhino
Brainy English Teacher
*
A selection of U.S. Presidents:
John Adams
James Madison
Martin van Buren
John Tyler
James K. Polk
Franklin Pierce
Abraham Lincoln
Grover Cleveland
Theodore Roosevelt
William Howard Taft
Woodrow Wilson
Harry Truman
Richard Nixon (he was such a gift to cartoonists! I was in high school during Watergate.)
Nixon
Richard Nixon - Henry Kissinger
Nixon - Novus Ordo Scelerum (A New Order of Crimes)
(rather clever if you know Latin...)
Gerald Ford (also fun to draw)
Ford (he was intellectually underrated at the time)
Gerald Ford - Turtle on Wheels
(to the best of my recollection, the point was:
after a slow start Ford was picking up steam.)
"What Shall We Throw in Next?"
Gerald Ford and Henry Kissinger
(Ford supposedly considered sacking Kissinger)
Jimmy Carter
Leonid Brezhnev (actually, not a U.S President, but also fun to draw)
*
Some musicians:
Igor Stravinsky
Charles Mingus
Paul Simon
Art Garfunkel
*
Harvard Faculty of the 1970s:
Dean Henry Rosovsky
John Kenneth Galbraith
James Watson
Juan Marichal
Harvard Old Testament Faculty Roasting a Graduate Student
*
Family portraits:
Brother Jim Propp as Alchemist
Father Ted Propp
Myself
*
Artists and artworks:
La Gioconda?
David
Moses
Auguste Renoir
Vincent Van Gogh
Vincent Van Gogh
Marc Chagall
Pablo Picasso
Pablo Picasso
*
Writers:
Samuel Beckett
Woody Allen
*
In a class by himself:
Albert Einstein
(I apologize that all these are men; I have drawn women too, but the fact is that, until recently, most famous people have been male, except for beautiful actresses, who are inherently difficult to caricature--unless you are Al Hirschfeld!)
* * *
As is tradition, I learned to caricature by copying "masters," primarily the celebrated David Levine
William F. Buckley after David Levine
(this is a naked forgery, down to the signature)
and the more obscure Kai Heinonen, who signed his work "KAI."
Governor and Vice President Nelson Rockefeller after KAI
Sammy Davis Jr. after KAI
Gov. George Wallace (I cannot remember whether this is by me, or another Heinonen copy)
I was once working in a museum in front of a portrait of Martin Luther, and a kid, maybe 12, came up to me and said, awestruck, "Are you KAI?" Though this really isn't up to Heinonen's level, the incident proved that I had reached a certain proficiency in the craft of forgery.
Martin Luther