Famed Cartoonist Gahan Wilson Dies At 89

icon 6 Photos
A Gahan Wilson cartoon.

A Gahan Wilson cartoon.

A Gahan Wilson cartoon.

A Gahan Wilson cartoon. COURTESY PAUL WINTERS

A Gahan Wilson cartoon.

A Gahan Wilson cartoon. COURTESY PAUL WINTERS

Gahan Wilson drawing a cartoon earlier this year at his memory care facility in Arizona.

Gahan Wilson drawing a cartoon earlier this year at his memory care facility in Arizona. COURTESY PAUL WINTERS

Gahan Wilson in front of the Sag Harbor Whaling Museum in May 2008.

Gahan Wilson in front of the Sag Harbor Whaling Museum in May 2008. ANNETTE HINKLE

Gahan Wilson earlier this year with his stepson, Paul Winters, at the memory care facility in Arizona.

Gahan Wilson earlier this year with his stepson, Paul Winters, at the memory care facility in Arizona. COURTESY PAUL WINTERS

authorAnnette Hinkle on Nov 22, 2019

Famed cartoonist Gahan Wilson, a longtime resident of Sag Harbor, died on Thursday, November 21. Mr. Wilson, who was 89 years old and suffering from advanced dementia and other health issues, lived in a memory care facility in Arizona.

Mr. Wilson was predeceased by his wife of 53 years, author Nancy Winters Wilson, who died on March 2, 2019. Caring for them both in their final months was Paul Winters, Ms. Wilson’s son and Mr. Wilson’s stepson.

In recent months, Mr. Winters had been posting updates on Mr. Wilson’s condition on a GoFundMe page that was set up earlier this year to help pay for his medical care.

“The world has lost a legend,” Mr. Winters wrote on the page on November 21. “One of the very best cartoonists to ever pick up a pen and paper has passed on. He went peacefully — surrounded by those who loved him.

“Gahan Wilson leaves behind a large body of work that is finely drawn, elegant and provocative,” he added.

Among the magazines in which Mr. Wilson’s work regularly appeared were Playboy, The New Yorker and National Lampoon, where his regular comic strip, “Nuts,” delved into the world of childhood trauma.

Mr. Wilson lived in Sag Harbor from the early 1990s until about five years ago, when he and his wife (who for many years lived in England in a unique but entirely happy marriage) moved to New York City. The couple lived in Greenwich Village until early 2019, when, due to their failing health, Mr. Winters relocated his parents to be near him in Arizona.

Back in 2008, Mr. Wilson was interviewed for a story in The Sag Harbor Express and, in that interview, he revealed that his great-uncles included both P.T. Barnum and William Jennings Bryan — perhaps accounting for his keen sense of irony.

Mr. Wilson was born on February 18, 1930, and grew up in Evanston, Illinois, on the shores of Lake Michigan. His earliest memories were formed by the ironies of the Great Depression — and images of once-comfortable people in his neighborhood struggling to survive on limited resources.

“My association as a kid growing up and formative stuff was out of the dimmest recollection of the actual Depression, which was horrendous,” Mr. Wilson said. “Society was on the verge of collapse and about to fall apart. If FDR hadn’t come along, it would have.”

One of Mr. Wilson’s strongest memories from his youth was that of a woman who stood on the side of the road in his hometown with a calliope, which she’d crank to make music. “She’d play it for change and survived the Depression that way,” he said. “Then she kept with it, but it started breaking down and skipping notes.

“The last time I saw her, I was on this bus, which would stop at a gas station on the route, and there was a big graveyard,” he continued. “There she was. The window was open. She was in this inappropriate place on the side of a hill, with no sound coming out of the thing whatsoever.”

With a talent for art and observation, Mr. Wilson attended the Chicago Art Institute and did a brief stint in the U.S. Air Force before moving to Greenwich Village, where he began honing his craft as a cartoonist.

“Young cartoonists had a chance to break in and scuttle around from one magazine to the other,” he said. “It was more degrading than being a door-to-door salesman.”

But it was a trade that Mr. Wilson continued to pursue throughout his long career. Along the way, he saw many magazines transform, and witnessed several others go under entirely.

Even when he lived in Sag Harbor, Mr. Wilson was still a freelance cartoonist plying his wares in New York. That’s where he would head every Tuesday to pitch his cartoons to magazines — along with all the other cartoonists in the city.

“Now there’s only two markets, Playboy and The New Yorker, and Playboy does everything by mail, so The New Yorker is it,” he said in the 2008 interview. Since that time, Playboy has cut back even more and is now a quarterly periodical.

During the years he lived in Sag Harbor, Mr. Wilson didn’t own a car, and he became a familiar fixture in the village as he walked to and from Main Street from his home.

“I very much enjoy not having a car,” Mr. Wilson said at the time. “It’s quite in vogue now to build towns so people can walk everywhere. I get bored silly doing exercises. I just have to walk into town for my exercise.

“It’s a nice little walk, and I go back and forth twice a day,” he added.

In an interview this past summer, Mr. Winters recalled that, after moving to the city, Mr. Wilson used to talk a lot about his time in Sag Harbor, recalling the people and the place with fondness. In recent months, as dementia took its toll, he noted that his stepfather never lost his sense of wonder about the world, and in fact regained much of it as his memory faded.

Finding humor and wonder in the world, and of course, irony, was a skill set that served Mr. Wilson well throughout his life, as evidenced at the end of his 2008 interview with the Express.

“I have one cartoon in The New Yorker this week,” Mr. Wilson said. “It’s a dungeon, and these two guys are hanging by their wrists from the wall with a shaft of light coming through the window. One guy’s saying to the other, ‘Remember when they couldn’t do this sort of thing to us?’”

In addition to his wife, Mr. Wilson was preceded by his parents, Allen and Marion Wilson. He leaves behind stepsons Randy Winters and Paul Winters, and daughter-in-law Patrice Winters. Wilson also leaves grandchildren Tiffany Smith, Jessica Winters, Chris Winters, Ashtin Winters, Carlie Winters, Rachel Winters, Kyle Winters, and Jessie Winters, and two great-grandchildren, Noah Smith, Jaylie Winters, and Elizabeth Winters.

You May Also Like:

Demetrice Lenora Brumsey of Ridge Dies November 19

Demetrice Lenora Brumsey of Ridge died on November 19 in Bayshore. She was 52. A visitation will take place Saturday, November 29, from 10-11 a.m., with a home-going service 11 a.m. at Riverhead Church of Christ. Interment will follow at Southampton Cemetery. Arrangements by the Brockett Funeral Home in Southampton. 22 Nov 2025 by Staff Writer

Freedom Experiment

There seems to be no end to the rationalizations for excusing the mass invasion of foreign nationals who crossed our borders without any authority to do so. Amy Paradise [“Define the Problem,” Letters, November 20] listed excuses why we should be sympathetic to their plight: economic opportunity; authoritarian, repressive governments; climate change; exposure via the internet to better situations; drug smuggling; U.S. business welcomes their cheap labor; and our historically benevolent history of welcoming them. Each one, it could be argued, serves our better angels, but Americans seem to discount the cost to scrub each case. Many stand on corners, ... by Staff Writer

'Tea Talk' Topic Is Indigenous Art and Culture

Stony Brook Southampton’s FoodLab will welcome professor Joseph M. Pierce as the guest speaker for its next Tea Talk Tuesday on December 2 at 3:30 p.m. The event, which is open to the community, will focus on Indigenous art and culture. Pierce, an associate professor at Stony Brook University and founding director of the Native American and Indigenous Studies Initiative, is a citizen of the Cherokee Nation. He will discuss his new book, “Speculative Relations: Indigenous Worlding and Repair,” which will be available for purchase. According to a press release, the talk will invite attendees to “imagine Indigenous futures and ... 21 Nov 2025 by Staff Writer

Parade Committee Organizing Toy Drive

The Southampton Village Fourth of July Parade Committee’s annual holiday toy drive is underway and will continue through November 29. The community initiative aims to bring joy to children and offer support to local military families during the holiday season. Residents are encouraged to donate new, unwrapped toys for children of all ages. Donations may be dropped off at Veterans Memorial Hall at 25 Pond Lane in Southampton, which will also serve as the site of Santa’s visit on November 29 following the Festival of Lights Parade. During that event, the committee will offer a free mug of chili to ... by Staff Writer

Turkey Trots Are on, Rain or Shine

The 49th Turkey Trots are to be held at 10 a.m. on Thanksgiving Day at ... by Jack Graves

Doc Fest 'Hometown Heroes' Film Contest Winners Announced

Hamptons Doc Fest education director Anita Boyer has announced the winners of its second annual “Hometown Heroes” documentary short film competition, where middle and high school students on the East End were invited to create a documentary short film honoring the local everyday heroes who have made a significant impact on their lives or their local community. Jackson Rohrer took first place, earning a $300 scholarship. He is a junior at the Shelter Island School and his winning film is “The Lifeline of Shelter Island — Cliff Clark.” Second place and a $200 scholarship went to Springs School eighth-grader Francisco ... by Staff Writer

Turkey Trots Abound Across Hampton Bays, Westhampton and East Moriches

There may be no better way to start a day of feasting than with a ... by Drew Budd

Our Neighbors

There was a post that appeared on Facebook from 27east describing the anti-ICE demonstration in Westhampton Beach on Friday, November 14. Scrolling through the comments, I was horrified to see the worst of human nature in print. The video showed numerous people of various ages peacefully holding signs such as “Fire Ice,” “We were all Immigrants,” “Abolish ICE,” “ICE is un-American,” “ICE — Hands Off,” etc. However, the comments posted below the video denigrated the participants with the following: “One can only assume this was a AARP-organized event.” “The [assisted] living facilities in the area need somewhere for the residents ... by Staff Writer

Owed Full Truth

Congressman Nick LaLota’s latest newsletter suggests that either he thinks we, his constituents, are ignorant, or that he, our representative, is willfully ignoring and misrepresenting the public facts. First, contrary to his statement that he supports “expos[ing] the full [Epstein] network, protect victims, safeguard innocent people, and ensure justice is never weaponized,” prior to his vote to release the Epstein files held by the Department of Justice and FBI, he did not sign the discharge petition to get legislation onto the floor of the House. It was not until the president changed his tune on Sunday, November 16, and said ... by Staff Writer

Who's To Blame?

It is Ed Surgan [“Warped View,” Letters, November 20] who seems to have the warped view. He lays the blame for the level of illegal immigration in our country squarely with the Democrats, but there has not been a successfully passed immigration reform bill since the Simpson-Mazzoli Act of 1986, signed into law by President Ronald Reagan. Attempts in 2007, 2013 and 2021 all failed to gain enough traction to pass, and the most recent bipartisan bill, in 2024, was killed by then-candidate Donald Trump. So, if there is a need to place blame at anyone’s door, that blame should ... by Staff Writer