The Rolling Stones
Custom portraits check out these hilarious 15 crazy caricatures of celebrities that don’t necessarily show them in the best light!
Bill Murray
Chelsea Stallone
Tom Cruise
Sarah Palin
Conan
Mark Zuckerberg
Owen Wilson
Bill Cozby
Lindsay Lohan
Woody Allen Scarlette Johanson
Bill Clinton
House MD
Mick Jagger
Ronnie Wood
Rodney Pike is a creative humorous illustrator from Gonzales, USA. He has a lifetime of experience in Graphic Designing, Fine Art and Digital illustration. Rodney offers Photo-Manipulated Illustrations of all sorts but he specialized in Photo-Manipulated Caricature Illustration, Political Satire and funny Illustration, perfect for magazines, books, etc. He has worked for FHM Magazine, The Village Voice Magazine, Tennis Magazine, New Coast Productions, Miller Publishing Group, Bauer Media, and Catchphrase Entertainment. He is a member of NAPP and ISCA. Have a look at super funny caricatures of celebrities.
Custom Portraits 15 Crazy Celebrities Caricatures
A caricature is a rendered image showing the features of its subject in a simplified or exaggerated way.
In literature, a caricature is a description of a person using exaggeration of some characteristics and oversimplification of others.
Caricatures can be insulting or complimentary and can serve a political purpose or be drawn solely for entertainment. Caricatures of politicians are commonly used in editorial cartoons, while caricatures of movie stars are often found in entertainment magazines.
The term is derived from the Italian caricare—to charge or load. An early definition occurs in the English doctor Thomas Browne’s Christian Morals, published posthumously in 1716.
Expose not thy self by four-footed manners unto monstrous draughts, and Caricatura representations.
When Men’s faces are drawn with resemblance to some other Animals, the Italians call it, to be drawn in Caricatura.
Thus, the word “caricature” essentially means a “loaded portrait”. According to School of Visual Arts caricature instructor Sam Viviano, the term refers only to depictions of real-life people, and not to cartoon fabrications of fictional characters, which do not possess objective sets of physiognomic features to draw upon for reference, or to anthropomorphic depictions of inanimate objects such as automobiles or coffee mugs. Walt Disney, on the other hand, equated his animation to caricature, saying the hardest thing to do was find the caricature of an animal that worked best as a human-like character.