Career
After Wilkinson received her BA in English, she began to pursue careers in journalism. She worked as a reporter, stringing for the Daily Post, the King of Prussia, and the West Chester Daily Local News.[9] She also worked for the Quakers and the Academy of Natural Sciences of Drexel University before working for a housing project in Cyprus. This job shortly ended due to a coup d'état in Cyprus, followed by a military invasion from Turkey.[1] Once Wilkinson returned to reporting, she would draw the people she reported on.
Realizing her interest in both art and politics, Wilkinson attended the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts for a year. During her time there, she stringed for various Philadelphia and New York publications. In 1982, she earned a full-time job at the San Jose Mercury News, where she spent three and a half years working as a cartoonist.[1] In the mid-1980s, Wilkinson worked for the Philadelphia Daily News as a cartoonist, where she still draws five cartoons a week.[10] In 1992, she became the first woman to win the Pulitzer Prize for Editorial Cartooning.[4] The same year, she released her first collection of cartoons, Abortion Cartoons on Demand.[11] Wilkinson has also created cartoons for Working Woman, Ms., Organic Gardening, the Institute for Research on Higher Education and several other publications, such as the Friends Journal and the University Barge Club newspaper.[9]
In 1992, she published her first collection of her work, entitled Abortion Cartoons on Demand.[11] In 2005, she released her second collection of cartoons, One Nation, Under Surveillance: Cartoon Rants on Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Privacy.[12]
She served as president of the Association of American Editorial Cartoonists from 1994 to 1995.[9][13]
On November 21, 2007, Wilkinson launched a syndicated daily comic strip with United Media entitled Family Tree.[13] This strip focused on environmental issues. Family Tree concluded on August 27, 2011. For Organic Gardening magazine, Wilkinson created a comic strip entitled Shrubbery that centered on botanical and political topics.[13] The Washington Post Writers Group syndicated Wilkinson's cartoons.[14]