Lonnie Millsap: 'My being a black cartoonist seemed to make people want to typecast me'
| Monica Page |
| Millsap at Meltdown Comics, March 10 |
He is the author of two cartoon collections, My Washcloth Stinks!and I Hate My Job!
Last year, Millsap's art was featured at the American Visionary Art Museum's special exhibit "What Makes Us Smile?" co-curated by Matt Groening, Gary Panter, and AVAM founder/director Rebecca Hoffberger. He is working on his third book, tentatively scheduled for a July release, with the working title I Stepped on a Duck!
![]() |
| Courtesy Lonnie Milsap |
| Matt Groening and Lonnie Millsap at the AVAM luncheon, 2011 |
Lonnie Milsap: It felt validating because I've been doing this for so long. Gary was a teacher of mine when I was 17 and that experience has inspired me to draw for all of these years. I submitted a lot of things and got a lot of rejections for so long, but at the end of 2009 I finished my first book and sent it to Gary with a note basically saying, "Look what I did." He was excited by it. Gary was in my corner to get me involved with the exhibit, and now Rebecca and I are close, too; she treats me like family.
Did Panter's work influence what you do?
I always liked Gary's attitude in his work, and I tried to carry that attitude into my own work. I try to be irreverent with the characters I use in my cartoons; I try not to follow any logic. I don't want them to be obvious; I want readers to have to think sometimes for the laugh.
It's fun to come across things that aren't predictable, to laugh at things that are unexpected.
Gary's stuff always made me laugh, it was so out there. I always wanted to be like that, but in my own skin.
Is that why do your cartoons have animals, food, and other items speaking? Because you know that toothpaste actually can't speak, right?
In the real world, I guess they can't talk. But in my world, I imagine what they'd say if they could. Inanimate things talking is just kind of funny to me.
You're a native Californian but spent many years in Atlanta. What prompted your return to LA?
When I completed my first book in Atlanta [in 2009] it was ready for distribution, and Atlanta's reception was okay at times, but the Atlanta vibe doesn't seem very open to my sense of humor.
Also, my being a black cartoonist seemed to make people want to typecast me, suggesting I cover certain topics. The thing is, the situations [in my cartoons] aren't black or white situations. From time to time, I'll do a politically tinged cartoon, but the humor is the focus for me; it's meant for everyone.
I thought there would be more options available in California and I was right; the people have been more receptive to my humor here. My humor is more off-beat and doesn't fall into a certain category. I consider myself a niche cartoonist and I'm fine with that as long as I find the people in my niche. I want them to know I'm out there.





























