MARK TURNER wallows in the virtuosity of Swansea Jazz Festival openers, Simon Spillett and Pete Long

THIS NEWSPAPER’S most notable cartoonists are a determined and fearless lot, uniquely skilled at mercilessly ambushing those holding the helm of the state. Shaming democracy, they have no regard for social justice.
Patronising working people, they are the epitome of moral and intellectual decay and in exposing them Star contributors follow in the best tradition of the irrepressible genius that was Mary Duval, the Hogarthian Adelaide Claxton, the astonishing Fay King and Ethel Hays, along with male cartoonists such as James Gillray, George Cruikshank or John Tenniel of Alice in Wonderland fame.
But they’re not mere imitators — each Star cartoonist has a highly individual and instantly recognisable style, employed in no-holds-barred satire and ridicule with dexterity and gusto.

MICHAL BONCZA highly recommends a revelatory exhibition of work by the doyen of indigenous Australians’ art, Emily Kam Kngwarray

Despite an over-sentimental narrative, MICHAL BONCZA applauds an ambitious drama about the Chinese rescue of British POWs in WWII

Strip cartoons used to be the bread and butter of newspapers and they have been around for centuries. MICHAL BONCZA asks our own Paul Tanner about which bees are in his bonnet

New releases from Hannah Rose Platt, Kemp Harris, and Spear Of Destiny