For this exercise I needed to illustrate an editorial from a newspaper or magazine.
My first mission was to obtain a newspaper. Quick pop out to a nearby shop, and a copy of the Irish Examiner:

I read the newspaper in search of a suitable article (got mildly distracted by the crossword… and maybe a sudoku or two…) and started doodling up some concepts from some of the most appealing articles.

It was an interesting process. I found it quite challenging to find fitting articles, and there was really only one or two that I felt worked for this exercise. Maybe I was inspired by Mr. E.H. Shepard from the last exercise because most of my ideas were political cartoons.

Among my rejected ideas was An Taoiseach (Prime Minister) literally running away from Ireland’s ubiquitous housing crisis. In the end I decided on an editorial about a new report from the Department of Finance. Ever since the bail-out of Irish banks following the 2008 crash, they’ve effectively been operating with tax exempt status. This report concluded that if banks are forced to repay their substantial backlog of taxes, it’s likely that they will raise rates and harm ordinary bank users, despite the banks making enormous profits year after year. This apparently was reason enough for the Minister for Finance to extend the banks tax exemption indefinitely.

Inspired by the ridiculousness of this situation and feeling like it would be something easy to satirise, I started developing some ideas for an illustration.

Immediately I thought of having two fat bankers, totally confused as to why they would need to pay taxes, and oblivious to their own excess wealth. What I found interesting about this process was that as I developed the idea more I tended to confuse the central idea and over clutter the image, literally and conceptually. They weren’t necessarily bad ideas, but once I was incorporating the Minister for Finance leashed inside the banking HQ to a nearby dog kennel with “Department of Finance” written on it, I was certainly amusing myself! But I think adding too much visual information to the piece. I took it back to my basic idea, satisfied that I had come up with something funny and relatively straightforward to complement the piece.
For this exercise I decided to do the drawing digitally. I’m not very used to drawing a more cartoon-ish style, and I was finding it difficult to get the faces exactly the way I wanted them in my sketchbook. I figured that I’d be a little more comfortable working digitally and being able to move things around and erase liberally without compromising the drawing at all.
I started with a base sketch that I would add neater lines over afterwards. I was actually pretty happy with the result, and didn’t need to alter the base image very much in my second layer.

For a sketch layer the lines are already fairly neat. If I had to do the exercise again I would probably try to be a little more fluid and sketchy at this stage of the drawing, hopefully allowing things to be a little more dynamic and expressive. Still, I don’t think the result is very bad.
Adding the linework was straightforward. I decided to do the font by hand, feeling like it would go with the aesthetic of the cartoon.

I haven’t done much handwritten elements like this before. I tried to go for the subtle comic-book art of making certain words slightly bold, and I think the effect adds a little touch of professionalism and looks really nice.
I had a little trouble choosing a good header, once again adding a little too much information. I had to constantly remind myself throughout this exercise to keep things simple! In the end I tried to distill it as much as possible, and hopefully managed to communicate the idea pretty simply.
Finally I added a splash of colour. I didn’t want to go for any complex shading or anything. Just a few block colours, done in a way to mimic traditional paint. I think it goes with the overall look of the drawing and helps to communicate certain aspects, like the mountains of gold, better than the simple line drawing.
Below is the final illustration.

Ref
McEnroe, Juno. “Consumers hit if banks forced to repay tax, report warns.” Irish Examiner 17 September 2018.















