- Jane Rosenberg states that she has been drawing in the style she traditionally uses.
- “I’m worried because I’ve gotten some strange emails from people,” he said.
- She did note that she is not worried about Trump himself, who often greets her.
A well-known court cartoonist who has been working on former President Donald Trump’s hush money trial says she has received “strange emails” from Trump fans unhappy with her depiction of him.
Jane Rosenberg claims that she has simply been drawing in the style she traditionally uses, but this has apparently angered some of the former president’s fans.
“I’m concerned because I’ve gotten some strange emails from people who don’t like the way I represent him or his family, whatever,” he told CNN on Tuesday.
He notes that he is not worried about Trump’s reaction to his work, although fans are a concern.
Host Anderson Cooper told Rosenberg that he was surprised the color orange wasn’t used more in his drawings.
Jane Rosenberg, the courtroom artist who has been working on former President Donald Trump’s hush money trial, says she has received “strange emails” from Trump fans unhappy with her depiction of him.
Rosenberg claims that he has simply been drawing in the style he traditionally uses, but this has apparently angered some of the former president’s fans.
One of Rosenberg’s many sketches of Trump from his hush money trial in New York City
“It had a little orange section, but it’s actually not completely orange,” he said.
“My role is a little orange, more or less like his skin tone.”
Rosenberg also noted that Trump greeted her when she entered the courtroom on Tuesday.
“Today he greeted me, he doesn’t always do it, but he does know who I am,” he said.
‘He’s seen me in DC and Florida. He knows who I am, I guess. [my drawing] He appeared on the cover of the New Yorker magazine.
Nicknamed the ‘Holbein of Crime,’ New York’s Jane Rosenberg has spent 40 years covering the courts – including the trials of R. Kelly and Harvey Weinstein – and is considered among the best in the business.
Rosenberg, now an employee of the Reuters news agency, is tasked with being the eyes of the public in US federal courts, including the one where Maxwell’s trial is taking place, where cameras are still prohibited.
In a matter of minutes, you can create a scene full of atmosphere, capturing the expressions, clothing and gestures of the main actors in the case.
Nicknamed the ‘Holbein of Crime,’ Jane Rosenberg, above, has spent 40 years covering the courts, including the trials of R. Kelly and Harvey Weinstein, and is considered the best in the business.
Rosenberg also noted that Trump greeted her when she entered the courtroom on Tuesday.
Rosenberg spoke after a dramatic day of testimony in the Stormy Daniels ‘hush money’ case in New York
speaking to The times During Ghislaine Maxwell’s trial in 2021, the cartoonist explained that He leaves the house before dawn every day to secure a prime seat in the courtroom.
She and the other performers have about seven seconds to capture Maxwell from the front, before she takes her seat and faces the judge, The Times reported.
However, Rosenberg, who studied art at the University at Buffalo, developed something of a unique relationship with Maxwell and “went viral” when the defendant began drawing her, while she was drawing.
Rosenberg, who began drawing in court when she was in a difficult financial situation and is now known worldwide, can create an image in a matter of seconds, drawing with broad strokes before filling in the details.
He spoke after a dramatic day of testimony in the Stormy Daniels ‘hush money’ case in New York.