At 56, Jim Carrey still carries a strong childhood memory of taking a train to Sudbury, a city in northern Ontario, Canada, to attend the funeral of an uncle who had died in a car crash.
"It was the greatest time of my life," he said in a phone interview, "because I drew cartoons on the train the entire trip. And I ran up and down the length of the train showing people my cartoons. I remember that as a really strong memory between me and my mother."

"Let's Make a Deal" (2018) by Jim Carrey Credit: Courtesy Jim Carrey/Maccarone
The show, titled "IndigNation," features 108 drawings from Carrey's Twitter feed, where the works where originally shared, from roughly 2016 to the present. The wall labels echo the tweets that accompanied the drawings.
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As a highly subjective document of a fraught political moment, it's a fascinating timeline, mainly depicting the president as a clown, a cyclops, a pig, a witch and a kinky ice cream-eater among other unflattering personages, alongside more flash-in-the-pan political figures.
Other sundry figures that briefly burst into headlines over the past two years are similarly subject to the invective of Carrey's colorful cartoons. Former political consultant Rick Gates, NRA CEO Wayne LaPierre, national security adviser John Bolton are all presented with much censure but little context. The show feels less like a critique than a reaction to -- and some ways an enactment of -- the disorienting political circus that sparked it.
"I have many friends who are connected in the media world and I get a lot of information from a lot of sources," Carrey said when asked where he gets his news from, "but I also watch the other side, to great chagrin, from time to time. It is about weird sides and misinformation and this strange pseudo structure we're living in, where half the people believe a completely different story."

"Greedzilla" (2018) Credit: Courtesy Jim Carrey/Maccarone
The world of Jim Carrey's political cartoons, where an Ace Ventura avatar gleefully rides atop an elephant with Trump's sons impaled on its tusks, relates only loosely to the history of art, or even the political cartoon itself. The latter is often a finely tuned metaphor, turning drawing into a narrative infographic. The reactionary force of "IndigNation," which has been the source of much of its praise, produces something different: revenge caricatures and revisionist fantasies.
"There's a little bit of a push that has to happen with someone like me," Carrey admitted. "People have to get over a preexisting prejudice about coming from a supposedly different line of work. But it's not a different line of work to me."

"The Great Spewdini" (2018) Credit: Courtesy Jim Carrey/Maccarone
It's true. Carrey's staggering talents as a comedian, actor and entertainer are undeniable and seemingly impossible to disentangle from any critique of his work as a visual artist.
Stripped of the context of his celebrity aura, the drawings and paintings resemble much of what can be found stacked on the blankets of any street artist hawking their wares on Venice Beach, or hung on the walls of a college town coffee shop or inked in the pages of an angry teen's notebook. Which makes "IndigNation" more compelling as a case study in the ethics of attention than anything else.

"Capitalism with a Conscience" (2018) Credit: Courtesy Jim Carrey/Maccarone

"Oh Say Can't You See" (2018) Credit: Courtesy Jim Carrey/Maccarone
But being a celebrity does come with a certain amount of influence. Does he feel a responsibility toward that influence?
"I feel lucky," he said. "I feel lucky to be in one of the last industries on Earth where people can tell the truth."
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