"Cartoonists shouldn’t
insult people or represent
things that do not exist..."
Murat Yilmaz is a Turkish
illustrator and director of
Karikaturevi. He was born in 1969 in
İzmit, Turkey. He began to draw in 1981.
Between 1988-1990, he drew for Yeni Düşünce Newspaper. Then he
drew for other local papers. He has worked for Tırpan magazine
between 1992-1994. He is still working for an information and
culture magazine called Semerkand. He is married and he has a
son. Murat Yilmaz gives us below his opinion about freedom of
expression.
1) How did you become a
cartoonist?
I decided once to send my drawings to some
magazines and newspapers. Most of them liked my works.
Then I started to draw more and more.
I have never stopped until now.
2) Which papers, magazines or websites do you
work for?
I have been working for almost
three years for a
magazine named
Semerkand.
I’m also the founder of
Karikaturevi,
which means “The House of Cartoon” in Turkish.
Karikaturevi is an interactive Website that gathers the drawings of
worldwide cartoonists.
3) What elements usually strike you and
inspire
you in the political news?
Religion, countries’ history, people. Actually all kinds of
dreadful injustice done to human beings interest me a lot.
I try to show my indignation through my cartoons.
4) Do you think there should be limits to the
cartoonist’s
freedom of expression? If so, what are the « redlines »?
Yes, there should be. The cartoonists shouldn’t
insult people or represent things that do not exist
or that are not true in reality.
5) Is there only one freedom of expression or
are there several ones? (Regarding the cultural differences from
one country to another)Each
country and each people has its own culture. If there are
different cultures then obviously there are different
behaviours.
6) What do you think about the Holocaust cartoon contest
organized by the Iranian newspaper Hamshari,
in response to the caricatures of Muhammad
published in several Europeans papers?
I think the persons who launched this contest could have rather
organized an alternative competition about Muslim culture
and about love between all human beings.
Such an event would have broken the negative stereotypes
towards Muslim.
Artists around the world would have been encouraged
to find more information about Muslim culture
and realities to realize their artwork.
They would have discovered by themselves
what is true and what is not and they would
have produced new reliable and correct cartoons
about Muslims.
Such a contest would have been a peaceful substitute
to the growing hatred between West and East.
7) Have some of your drawings been censored?
In which circumstances?
Yes, but the circumstances always change; it depends on the time
and the country’s type of government.
8) Do you have any self-censorship? What are
the most difficult subjects to represent?
Yes, I do have self-censorship.
If I cannot find enough information about the subject I’m
working on,
it becomes very difficult for me.
10) Do you think that the cartoonist is an
artist or rather a journalist, or may be both?
It can be both of them.
11) According to you, does he have to make
people laugh or to make them think?
According to me, it can be both at the same time.
These purposes can also be separate.
12) What is for you the most difficult
situation or
person to draw?It’s
hard for me to draw about cartoons and cartoonists,
because I belong to this world. So I don’t have an objective way
of seeing things.
Visit
Karikaturevi
Visit the gallery of Murat Yilmaz