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Home The Post Arts

The Power of Connection: Why Live Caricature is More Than Just Art

Beyond the drawing board: How a local caricaturist uses art as a "disruptor" to foster human connection in an age of digital distraction.

by Steve Panozzo
1 April 2026
in Arts
0 0
The Power of Connection: Why Live Caricature is More Than Just Art

While I am often booked to draw live caricatures at events, the initial conversations are always about how many caricatures I can churn out in, say, three hours. People rarely consider the real benefits of a live caricaturist at a wedding or corporate gathering.

There’s a reason I am usually represented by entertainment agents and not an art gallery.

Drawing live is never really about the art nor the number of caricatures I draw – it’s about the value I bring to the event. There is a kind of “magic” in seeing a portrait being created in less than ten minutes. I might only be drawing one person at a time, but I’m entertaining a crowd of onlookers while I do it, while they idly crack jokes with each other or ask questions. The real value is in these interactions.

Recently, I was drawing a pair of work colleagues at a technology conference. I began chatting, introducing myself to the pair, a man and a woman. Within 30 seconds I found out they did for work and that she was looking forward to a skiing holiday.

“I didn’t know you liked skiing,” he said to his workmate. I asked how long they had worked together. “Two years,” she replied.

I was shocked that two people could share a workspace and, in the space of 24 months, completely fail to actually communicate on any real level. Conversely, I was able to discern a lot about this person in less than a minute. Importantly, the caricature was merely a catalyst that allowed these people to drop the work jargon for a few minutes. Hopefully that quick caricature led to a slightly deeper working relationship.

Art is a disruptor when our financial and business sectors become so dominant that we risk knowing the cost of everything but the value of nothing.

It is a reminder that value isn’t just about numbers. It’s about what we assign value to, and there’s so much more to life than bank transactions. Instead of becoming mere number-obsessed cogs in an economy, artists remind people what is really important… being human.

The Art of Being Human

  • Beyond the Sketch: The true value of a live caricaturist lies in the interaction and entertainment of the crowd, not just the final product.
  • Breaking the Ice: Art acts as a "disruptor," allowing colleagues and strangers to drop professional jargon and connect on a personal level.
  • The 30-Second Rule: How a quick portrait session can reveal more about a person than two years of sharing an office space.
  • Core Philosophy: In a number-obsessed economy, artists serve as a vital reminder to value humanity over transactions.
Steve Panozzo

Steve Panozzo

Steve Panozzo's newspaper career began in 1985 when he was appointed Artist-in-Residence at The Manly Daily in Sydney, after which followed an eighteen-month-long stint at Weekly Neighbourhood Newspapers and Community Newspapers in Perth. Then followed 10 long, hard years at News Limited in Sydney,appearing daily in The Australian and The Daily Telegraph. One month later (on the day of the stock market crash in October 1987), Steve chatted with Rupert Murdoch about stocks and shares... and the speed of elevators (for three bloody floors).

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