Chad Carpenter
Chad Carpenter (born ca. 1967) is an American cartoonist, best known for his comic panel Tundra.[1] Carpenter launched the strip in the Anchorage Daily News in his home state of Alaska in 1991. Since then, he has self-syndicated it to over 330 newspapers,[1] an unusually high amount for strips in self-syndication.
Early life
Carpenter was born and raised in Wasilla, Alaska, immersed in nature at an early age as he grew up. In 1988, in his early 20s, he left the state and moved to Sarasota, Florida. While in Sarasota, he met Dik Browne, the creator of Hägar the Horrible, and Mike Peters, the creator of Mother Goose and Grimm. Both cartoonists advised him; Peters told him to draw what he knew. This inspired Carpenter to create a comic about the nature and wildlife he had come to know so well back in Alaska.
Tundra
Created in 1991, Tundra is published on a daily basis, always in one of two formats: Either a single-panel gag comic or a three-panel strip with regular characters and more complex humor. This alternation is similar to that used in Mother Goose and Grimm and Non Sequitur. Unlike those strips, Tundra tends to deal with wildlife and the outdoors; its humor appeals to all demographics, young & old. Tundra also occasionally uses reader-submitted ideas.
Carpenter still self-syndicates the strip within the United States, and currently appears in over 330 newspapers as a result.[1] Since 2007, the strip has been syndicated internationally by King Features Syndicate. It now appears in newspapers in the United States, Canada, Jamaica, Germany, Switzerland, Sweden and Trinidad and Tobago. He has published and sold 20 Tundra books and has also produced extensive amounts of other Tundra-branded merchandise.
In May 2008, Tundra was named the best newspaper panel of 2007 by the National Cartoonists Society.[2]
In August 2008, Carpenter was presented with a legislative citation honoring him as Alaska's Cartoon Laureate. It was presented to him by Wes Keller, a member of the Alaska House of Representatives.
Other art contracts
Carpenter's artistic talents have led to his being contracted for projects with the National Association of Search and Rescue, the Alaska State Troopers, the United States Navy, and other companies.
References
- 1 2 3 Office of Representative Wes Keller (August 27, 2008). "Tundra Creator Honored as Alaska's Cartoon Laureate" (Press release). Alaska Legislature House Majority. Retrieved March 23, 2009.
- ↑ "Alaska’s 'Tundra' named best newspaper comic". Fairbanks Daily News-Miner. June 16, 2008.
External links
- Official website of Tundra