Skip to main content
Donate to the 95 years appeal
Meet the cartoonist: Dee Huez
The Morning Star's pages are enlivened by some sharp political cartoonists. One of them talks to Michal Boncza about his work
Cartoonist Dee Huez and one of his cartoons

Where are you from?

I was born in Glasgow and live in Gateshead.

What prompted you to draw cartoons?

I just had a growing sense of frustration and anger with politicians. I began to realise that those in charge have nothing but contempt for the British people.

I started drawing cartoons as a bit of a relief. I’d come home from work, draw a cartoon about what annoyed me the most during the day, then I’d move on and forget about it all.

Have you any formal training in visual arts?

I was self-taught until I did a Masters in Contemporary Art and Education at Northumbria University. That’s where I started experimenting with political cartoons.

Which part of the process of drawing is the most difficult?

Adding colour. The vast bulk of my illustration work is black and white. I started adding really crude and garish colour to the cartoons as a way of showing further disrespect.

How do you “get” the likeness right in a caricature?

I used to be really awful at it. I really had to learn caricature before I could draw cartoons that I could show anyone.

Once you learn what to look for in someone's face, then everyone looks hilarious.

What annoys you most in public figures and do you see the ridiculing of them as a civic duty?

Mostly it’s the self-assured self-importance of these people who blithely see us all as idiots who will swallow whatever shit they throw at us.

I'm not sure its anyone’s duty to ridicule anyone — that’s just my pleasure — but everyone owes it to themselves not to blindly revere public figures, who have hidden agendas that require your compliance.

How important are cartoons as “comic relief?”

Absolutely. Just seeing someone else illustrate an absurdity which you sensed yourself is extremely important. It gives you a connection with other like-minded people in a way that the written word can't.

What response do you seek from your satire?

I bet most Morning Star readers have had these thoughts before I draw them as cartoons. I reckon most of them react by thinking: “Aye, bastards, all.”

Cartoonists are said to be gloomy. Are you?

I’m probably typically misanthropic but at least I can laugh about it all.

The 95th Anniversary Appeal
Support the Morning Star
You can read five articles for free every month,
but please consider supporting us by becoming a subscriber.
More from this author
Cartoons: (L to R) Citizen Chicane and Songi
Culture / 23 December 2024
23 December 2024
(L to R) the book cover; Labour Party election poster 1945;
Books / 3 December 2024
3 December 2024
MICHAL BONCZA recommends a compact volume that charts the art of propagating ideas across the 20th century
Cairokee play Telk Qadeya (That is a Cause)
Gig review / 5 May 2024
5 May 2024
MICHAL BONCZA reviews Cairokee gig at the London Barbican
PROUD HISTORY: (L to R) Living Wage Campaign by COSATU (The
Culture / 29 April 2024
29 April 2024
Similar stories
Cartoons: (L to R) Citizen Chicane and Songi
Culture / 23 December 2024
23 December 2024
Tottenham Hotspur manager Ange Postecoglou gestures on the t
Men’s football / 20 December 2024
20 December 2024
Postecoglou welcomes scrutiny but calls some recent pundit comments ‘offensive’
George Osborne's
Book Review / 10 December 2024
10 December 2024
WILL STONE relishes a refreshingly irreverent raconteur's record on politics at the turn of the millennium
(L to R) Utagawa Kunisada, The Female Bandit Kijin no Omatsu
Opinion / 17 July 2024
17 July 2024
Star cartoonist MALC McGOOKIN introduces two commercial artists beloved by cartoonists and comic artists the world over