Ron Tandberg b. 1943 Melbourne, Vic.

  • Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
Prolific contemporary Melbourne newspaper cartoonist and poster artist. He created the much-publicised poster supporting the condom campaign in the fight against AIDS, with the slogan "Tell him if it's not on, it's not on." Has won several awards for his work.
Name
Ron Tandberg
Birth date
1943
Birth place
Melbourne, Vic.
Gender
Male
Roles
  • Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
Other Occupation
  • cartoonist
Website
Active Period
  • 1965- 2001
Cultural Heritage
  • Irish
  • Norwegian
Languages
  • English
Training
  • Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology, Melbourne, Vic.
Is Indigenous
No
Initial Record Data Source
  • Black and white artists

cartoonist, was born and educated in Melbourne. He worked for a while as a teacher then turned professional after a strip was internationally syndicated in the 1960s. He drew the cover of Overland no.69 about Gough Whitlam in 1978. In 1988 he drew a much-publicised poster promoting the government campaign to use condoms as a preventative against AIDS with the slogan: 'Tell him if it’s not on, it’s not on”. For years public lavatory doors (e.g. ANU) were adorned with these small, framed posters showing his cheerful little man walking along with a condom over his head. He also drew cartoons for the 1991 'Quit’ campaign (originals ML PxD 672/37-39). His humanitarian (and/or left wing) sympathies have always been evident, although apparently not to the Savage Club, Melbourne, where the Secretary told JK in 1999 that Tandberg and Peter Nicholson had refused the offer of membership on the grounds of not wanting to belong to any club that had people like businessman and prominent Liberal John Elliott as members.

First published in the Age in 1972, Tandberg has been its regular cartoonist ever since, e.g. Vacancies Nuclear Plant , published 5 April 1979 (ill. Christine Dixon). In 1979 he was among the eleven cartoonists included in the newspaper’s Black and White 125th Anniversary Exhibition at the Age Gallery, 250 Spencer Street – comprising staff cartoons and photographs – along with Horner , Leunig , Nicholson, Petty , Spooner , Tanner et al (copy of review by Mary Eagle, Age 5 October 1979). He was briefly at News Ltd in the 1980s, but then returned to the Age . His small cartoons also appeared regularly in the news and letter pages of the Sydney Morning Herald from the 1990s (see 'Tandberg is back at the Herald’, SMH 23 November 1994, 3) – irregularly from the 1980s – until 15 September 2001, when the letters’ editor announced that after almost twenty ( sic ) years Tandberg’s little gags would no longer be appearing there. Instead, the single-column simple line cartoon was done by other artists, e.g. Shakespeare (but more in Tandberg’s style than Shakespeare’s).

A member of the Australian Black and White Artists’ Club, Tandberg won a Stanley Award for best editorial/political cartoonist in 1986. By 1998 he had won at eleven Walkleys, nine for best cartoon and 2 Gold Walkleys – in 1979 and 1986. His fourth (1979) Walkely was for two identical pictures of a supercilious Fraser labelled 'The public image of Malcolm Fraser’ and 'the real Malcolm Fraser’, done for the Age (ill. Peter Cole-Adams, The Best of the Age 1979-80 , Nelson, 1980, 146). A copy of his Walkley Award winner, “Bill I’ve caught you with your pants down!”/ “It’s Bob”, published in the Age in February 1983 after the announcement of the Federal election by Fraser was immediately followed by a change of leadership from Haydon to Hawke, was donated to BFAG by the artist in 1983.

'Australia offends Pacific nations’, published in the Sydney Morning Herald on 22 July 1997, and Aboriginal people in custody , published in the Age on 23 December 1996, were exhibited in the National Museum of Australia’s annual Old Parliament House exhibition Bringing the House Down: 12 Months of Australian Political Humour (Canberra, 1997), cats 58, 90. He had one cartoon, 'Dad’s army’, in Bringing the House Down 2001 .

Tandberg lives at Mount Macedon, Victoria.

Writers:
Kerr, Joan
Date written:
1996
Last updated:
2007
associate of
Michael Leunig
1945
Artist (Screen Artist), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator), Artist (Painter)
associate of
Peter Nicholson
1946
Artist (Screen Artist), Artist (Sculptor), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Arthur Wakefield Horner
1916
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Bruce Leslie Petty
1929
Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Sculptor), Artist (Screen Artist), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Les Tanner
1927
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
John Shakespeare
1961
Artist (Photographer), Artist (Sculptor), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
relative of
Geoffrey Serle
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
associate of
Lindsay Foyle
Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
John Henry Spooner
1946
Artist (Painter), Artist (Printmaker), Artist (Cartoonist / Illustrator)
associate of
Australian Black-and-White Artists Club
Non-Artist/Designer/Curator
Cartoons 2004: Behind the lines: The year's best cartoons
2005
Exhibition ()
National Museum of Australia, Canberra, ACT
Bringing the House Down 2001
2001
Exhibition ()
National Museum of Australia / Old Parliament House, Canberra
Bringing the House Down: 12 Months of Australian Political Humour
1997
Exhibition ()
National Museum of Australia / Old Parliament House, Canberra
The Age: Black and White 125th Anniversary Exhibition
1979
Exhibition (exhibited at)
Age Gallery, 250 Spencer Street, Melbourne, Victoria
Recognitions
Gold Walkley Award
1979
Award
Also 1986
Citations:
  • Radcliffe, Russ (ed.), (2005), It's all happening: the Scribe book of Australian sports cartoons, (Place: Melbourne, Vic.: Scribe)
  • Radcliffe, Russ (ed.), (2005), Best Australian Political Cartoons 2005, (Place: Melbourne, Vic.: Scribe)
  • Radcliffe, Russ (ed.), (2004), Best Australian Political Cartoons 2004, (Place: Melbourne, Vic.: Scribe)
  • (1997), Bringing the House Down: 12 Months of Australian Political Humour, (Place: National Museum of Australia, Canberra, ACT)
  • Hansen, Guy, (2005), [Cartoons 2004]: Behind the lines: The year's best cartoon, (Place: National Museum of Australia, Canberra, ACT)
  • Cole-Adams, Peter, (1980), The Best of the Age 1979-80, (Place: Melbourne, Vic., Nelson, p 146)
  • Eagle, Mary, (5 October 1979), [review of The Age: Black and White 125th Anniversary Exhibition], (Place: Melbourne, Vic.: Age)
  • (1986), Australian Black-and-White Artists Club Book of Originals, (Place: Sydney, New South Wales: Australian Black-and-White Artists Club / AGNSW (178.1988.1-102))
  • Turner, Ann, (2000), 'Assassins at a stroke: Contemporary Australian Cartoonists', (Place: National Library of Australia, Canberra, ACT, NLA News, October, p.12)
  • Tandberg, Ron, (c.1994), The Ageless Tandberg, (Place: Melbourne, Vic.: Wilkinson Books)
  • Turner, Ann (ed.), (2000), In Their Image: Contemporary Australian Cartoonists, (Place: National Library of Australia, Canberra, ACT (NLA oral history interviews))
  • Tandberg, Ron, (1981), The Age of Tandberg, (Place: Melbourne, Vic.: Edward Arnold)
  • King, Jonathan, (1979), The other side of the coin: a cartoon history of Australia, (Place: Stanmore, NSW: Cassell Australia (Revised edition))
  • Bridges, Jim and Heimann, Rolf (eds.), (1988), Australia, the cartoon, (Place: Carlton, Vic.: McCulloch)
  • Adams, Phillip, (1986), Arrest that Cartoonist!, (Place: Ringwood, Vic.: Penguin)
See also:
  • cartoon illustrated in Ann Turner, 'Assassins at a stroke: Contemporary Australian Cartoonists', NLA News October 2000, p.12
  • self portrait in Overland 67 (1977), p 66
  • (self?) portrait, ill. King, p 21
  • self-portrait cartoon on front page of Age, 9 June 1976 with Nicholson, Petty, Spooner and Tanner - 'Australia's finest gallery of cartoonists'