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  1. Avrom Yanovsky (April 3, 1911 – May 22, 1979) was a Canadian graphic artist and editorial cartoonist, whose work appeared in a variety of leftist publications. He was known professionally as Avrom, though some of his work was also signed Armand, Richards or Tinòdi.

  2. YANOVSKY Avrom. Nom de plume: “Armand”. “Perhaps more than any other art form, the cartoon reflects our personal prejudices as victim.”. The Hecklers, 227. Yanovsky was born in Kirov Rog now the Ukraine in 1911, and came with his family to Winnipeg, November 22, 1913. He grew up in the labour movement.

  3. 10. Feb. 2019 · This is a preliminary exploration of the work of Avrom Yanovsky (1911–1979) as a cultural producer associated with the radical left in Canada. The historical sieve of cultural selection has not favoured him, but the name “Avrom,” with which he signed most of his work, is a recurring signifier in the historical memory of the ...

  4. 15. Aug. 2013 · In the late summer of 1945, after the war was over, Avrom Yanovsky began drawing stories for Bell Features Publications. His main creation was Major Domo and Jo-Jo in Joke Comics No. 21 and around the same time he did a one-off strip in Commando Comics No. 13 called “Sasha and Masha -The Young Russian Guerillas.”.

  5. 8. Aug. 2019 · Avrom Yanovsky (1911–1979) was a Canadian graphic artist and editorial cartoonist, whose work appeared in a variety of leftist publications. He was known professionally as Avrom, though some of his work was also signed Armand, Richards or Tinòdi. In 1966-67, he was president of the Canadian Society of Graphic Art.

  6. In the late summer of 1945, after the war was over, Avrom Yanovsky began drawing stories for Bell Features Publications. His main creation was Major Domo and Jo-Jo in Joke Comics No. 21.

  7. 10. Feb. 2019 · This is a preliminary exploration of the work of Avrom Yanovsky (1911–1979) as a cultural producer associated with the radical left in Canada. The historical sieve of cultural selection has not...