Edward Koren was born in New York City and attended Columbia College. He has contributed more than one thousand cartoons to The New Yorker and many other publications, and he has published a book for children and six collections of cartoons. Koren's work has been exhibited internationally and remains in the permanent collections of the Fogg Art Museum and the Fitzwilliam Museum in Cambridge, Massachusetts, and in the Swann Collection of Caricature and Cartoon in the Library of Congress. He lives in Vermont with his family.
Published July 14, 1980
People in the park frolic around a huge, formless monument labeled 'Lacks Structure and Meaning.'
The premium giclée print is produced on thick (310 gsm), textured watercolor paper made from alpha cellulous wood pulp that is acid free. It shares the same vivid colors, accuracy, and exceptional resolution that make giclée prints the standard for museums and galleries around the world.
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