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@johnleedraws / johnleedraws.tumblr.com

John Lee / johnleedraws.com
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Another one for Foreign Affairs, thanks AD Ed Johnson. For Patrick Radden Keefe's review of Matthew Connelly's The Declassification Engine: What History Tells Us About America's Top Secrets. I used open-sourced, redacted US intelligence documents about sordid things like death squad funding, nuclear weapon blast radii, and casualty estimates for the "waves." Just some more light fare in the editorial illustration world.

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Today for Qingming, I want to offer up all the treats in the world: slivers of corn husks, tiny catnip pillows, warm laps, head scratches. I want to bridge the here and the there with an inferno of morning sun, casting squares on the floor. Missing my friends that I lost this year, Eponine and Happy.

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For Foreign Affairs Book Review, Fredrick Logevall’s review of Kennan: A Life Between Worlds by Frank Costigliola.

George F. Kennan was a US diplomat who was one of the architects for the policy of containment of the USSR during the Cold War, a policy which he later criticized. He famously wrote the “Long Telegram” from Moscow in 1946, explaining Soviet rationales, and the “X” article in Foreign Affairs, which he wrote under the pseudonym of Mr. X and outlined the policy of containment.

My AD Ed Johnson was able to source the original X Article from FA and we used it in this collage. Also used Soviet Era military maps, which meticulously documented the entire world, including the Pentagon.

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These two pieces got into the Society of Illustrators 65 Exhibition under Editorial thanks to the jury of my peers. I haven't really entered into many competitions, so it was a really nice surprise to be recognized. Many thanks to my art directors Ed Johnson at Foreign Affairs and Claire Merchlinsky at The New York Times. The 1st one accompanied a piece by Jeff Yang about Asian American heroes in media representation, but for the main figure I made it a portrait of a family friend Yueh Chien, who went missing in the summer of 2021. As a way of processing her disappearance, I wanted everyone in the world to look at her face because at the time I felt like she wasn't being searched for hard enough. The 2nd one is for a book review centered around Chinese Premier Zhao Ziyang, who was purged from power and public life because he was sympathetic to student protestors during the Tiananmen crisis. He served for 2 years as leader of the CCP and General Secretary and was succeeded by Jiang Zemin, who passed away today.

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I remember it being a lot easier to have back and forth conversations on here but it really does a seem a lot clunkier after having been on bird app for so long.

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