Young Cartoonist of the Year Award
| Young Cartoonist of the Year Award | |
|---|---|
Young Cartoonist of the Year Award | |
| Awarded for | The best in cartoons |
| Sponsored by | Cartoon Art Trust and British Cartoonists' Association |
| Country | United Kingdom |
| First award | 1995 |
| Website | www |
The Young Cartoonists Awards, also known as the Young Cartoonist of the Year Award, is an annual award ceremony hosted by the Cartoon Museum in London in association with the British Cartoonists' Association, awards being given to the best young cartoonists, in the category of Under 18 and Under 30. The judging and awards ceremonies are hosted at the Cartoon Museum. A number of past winners have gone on to enjoy successful careers in cartooning, including Ella Baron and Will McPhail.
History
The Young Cartoonist of the Year Award was originally founded as the Mel Calman Awards in 1995, in memory of The Times cartoonist and Cartoon Art Trust founder.[1] The first awards were presented by Peter Stothard, editor of The Times, the original sponsors of the awards. [2] The original judges included Mark Bryant, Enzo Apicella, Steve Bell, Peter Brookes, and Posy Simmonds. The winner was 17 year old Jonathan Cusick. [2]
The awards ceremony has been held at the Postal Museum, London (1995), Simpson's-in-the-Strand (1996), and at the Mall Galleries during the Cartoon Art Trust Awards. More recently the ceremony has been at The Cartoon Museum in London.[3] Today the awards are run jointly by the Cartoon Art Trust and the British Cartoonists' Association.
Overview
Entrants are requested to submit one cartoon, in colour or black and white, drawn freehand to a maximum size of A4.[4] (In 2013 digitally created work was included.)
The awards are judged by noted cartoonists, including Oliver Preston, Martin Rowson, Steve Bell, Charles Peattie, Dave Brown, Matt Pritchett, Woodrow Phoenix, James Mellor, Pete Songi, Ros Asquith, [3]and Comics Laureate Hannah Berry.[1] The competition receives around 1,000 submissions every year.[5]
Each winner receives a prize of £250 and a certificate. There are three categories: Under 18, Under 30, and the "Woodcock Prize" - awarded in memory of the late surrealist cartoonist Kevin Woodcock.[3]
Awards
Past winners include Ella Baron, The New Yorker cartoonist Will McPhail[6] and Matt Buck.[4]
- 1995: 1st YCOTY Awards Jonathan Cusick (age 17) [2]
- 2007: 12th YCOTY Awards James Hood
- 2009: 14th YCOTY Awards[7]
- 2010: 15th YCOTY Awards: Alex Driver
- 2011 16th YCOTY Awards [8]
- Best Cartoonist Under 30: Joe Mounsey
- Best Cartoonist Under 18: Jasper Ashton-Nelson, aged 13
- 2012: 17th YCOTY Awards [9][6]
- Best Cartoonist Under 30 Will McPhail [6][10][9]
- Best Cartoonist Under 18: Harry McSweeny, aged 14 [9]
- 2016 21st YCOTY Awards
- 2017: 22nd YCOTY Awards
- Best Cartoonist Under 30: Ella Baron[13]
- 2018: 23rd YCOTY Awards
- Best Cartoonist Under 18: Laura Ross-Stuttard (age 16)
- Best Cartoonist Under 30: Matthew Dixon
- Woodcock Prize: Hugh Kay (age 11)
- 2020: 25th YCOTY Awards [14] [1] [15]
- 2021: 26th YCOTY Awards [14][16]
- Best Cartoonist Under 18: Rohan Rooney (Runners Up: Emily Young (2nd place, U18 category), Reyansh Avihash, Holly Chadwick, Jack Cherry, Liv Gwinner, Hayden Hewathantri & Trix Latimer) [14] [16]
- Best Cartoonist Under 30: Cara Grainger (Runners Up: Lara Evans (2nd place, U30 category) Jo Sarginson (3rd place, U30 category), Zoom Rockman & Hannah Rohin) [14][16]
- Woodcock Prize: Bianca Hsu (age 9) [14] [16]
- 2022: 27th YCOTY Awards [17]
- 2023: 28th YCOTY Awards[18]
- 2024 - 29th YCOTY Awards[3]
See also
References
- ^ a b c d e Topping, Alexandra. "Daniel Meikle and Fergus Boylan named Young Cartoonists of the Year: Judges including the Guardian’s Martin Rowson praised Meikle, just 11, in the under-18s category and 29-year-old Boylan, who picked up the under-30 prize," The Guardian (30 December 2020). Retrieved 26 August 2021.
- ^ a b c Mark Bryant, Cartoon Museum News, Summer 2023
- ^ a b c d e f g 2024 winners at www.brokenfrontier.com Retrieved 3 January 2026
- ^ a b Elofson, Matt. "Banbury boy wins 'Young Cartoonist of the Year' award: A Banbury boy has won a national award for 'Young Cartoonist of the Year' for 2020," Banbury Guardian (6 January 2021). Retrieved 31 August 2021.
- ^ Newman, Nick. "Why Does No One Want to be a Cartoonist Anymore?", The Spectator (25 July 2020). Retrieved 27 August 2021.
- ^ a b c McCullins, Darren. "The cartoonist who began by doodling in zoology," BBC Scotland (10 March 2019). Retrieved 31 August 2021.
- ^ a b c "Schoolboy humour wins young cartoonist award: A 16-year-old schoolboy from Kent has won the young cartoonist of the year award," BBC News (7 December 2009). Retrieved 28 August 2021.
- ^ procartoonists.org 2011 Retrieved 12 Feb 2026
- ^ a b c procartoonists.org Retrieved 12 February 2026
- ^ downthetubes.net Retrieved 10 February 2026
- ^ Billy Partridge at Shutterstock.com Retrieved 16 February 2026
- ^ Alex Dempsey at Shutterstock.com Retrieved 16 February 2026
- ^ "Oxford graduate named best young cartoonist," The Jewish Chronicle (9 November 2017). Retrieved 27 August 2021.
- ^ a b c d e f g Cartoon Museum 2021 Retrieved 12 February 2026
- ^ a b c Banbury Guardian Jan 2021 Retrieved 12 February 2026
- ^ a b c d Khomami, Nadia. "Doomed duck and arts cuts among themes of young cartoonists of year: Winners chosen from over 150 entries to awards run by Cartoon Museum and British Cartoonists’ Association," The Guardian (12 April 2022). Retrieved 13 April 2022.
- ^ a b c d museumsandheritage.com Retrieved 12 February 2026
- ^ a b c d Cartoon Museum Official Site Retrieved 11 February 2026
- ^ news item at www.mnrjournal.co.uk Retrieved 4 January 2026