Harold Arthur McNeill, a former Magic: The Gathering artist
"...a new fact appears in history—the State as the outcome of reflection and calculation, the State as a work of art. This new life displays itself in a hundred forms, both in the republican and in the despotic States, and determines their inward constitution, no less than their foreign policy." -- Jacob Burckhardt, Civilization of the Renaissance in Italy
As seen in The Wire, Mediaite, and Prufrock
(a blog by J. Arthur Bloom, tweet me suggestions at @j_arthur_bloom)
Harold Arthur McNeill, a former Magic: The Gathering artist
Sarah Palin, by Steve Penley
via @slone
Carolina Reyes, “Ayn Rand (The Philosopher)”
At top, “Along the Allegheny,” middle left, “Among the Fortunate,” left “Hapless Scrivener.” Bottom left, “Squid Gate,” middle, “Tank,” bottom right, “The Consultant.”
A photo of the artist (on left).
Michael LeKites. At top, "Alone With God,“
Kate Barnett’s blog, not much in the way of political art, but a lot of politics and a lot of gothic pin-ups.

(Facebook)
Frances Byrd, pictured at top with Rudy Giuliani.
Top left, “Everybody Hates the Pope”
Top right, “Pour it On,” inspired by what she sees as the unreasonable criticism of America’s use of torture: “This painting is in response to the scandal over waterboarding and the defense of terrorists. I find it absolutely ridiculous that anyone would afford the same level of concern for the well-being of a terrorist, as for the civilians they prey upon.”
Bottom left, “Don’t Cry for Me Amerika,” a Hillary Clinton-Eva Peron mash-up; “As the title suggests, both women had an overwhelming arrogance and over-inflated sense of their own importance. Both women would stop at nothing to achieve their goals and had no regard for the concerns of the people they set out to ‘help’. Don’t Cry for Me Amerika is a testament to the big government mentality and power-hungry actions of two women hell-bent on making a place for themselves in history.”
Bottom center; “Compassionate Conservatism #1,” a shot at “the worst legacy Bush could have bestowed upon the people of the United States.”
Bottom right, “Empty Behind the Mask.” It’s John Kerry, if you couldn’t tell.
Here’s an interview with Byrd, featuring some of her less overtly political work. And here’s something she wrote for Breitbart.