Pickering was born in Australia on 18 October 1942. Initially employed as a
proofreader, Pickering was able to gain the attention of John Allan, the editor of
The Canberra Times. Allan gave Pickering the opportunity to work for the paper as a
political cartoonist, and Pickering's early work coincided with the
Whitlam and
Fraser governments. It was at this time his first book of cartoons,
The Hansard Papers, written by Reuters Economic Services Canberra correspondent Michael Guy and illustrated by Pickering was published and went to No. 1 on the Australian bestseller lists. Pickering was awarded two
Walkley Awards with
The Canberra Times for his work, one in 1971 and a second the following year in 1972. Pickering went on to win the award a further two times, in 1973 with
The National Times, and in 1974 with
The Sydney Morning Herald. In 1976, Pickering moved to
The Australian, where his "Jungle Series" was featured in the newspaper's weekend edition. He remained with
The Australian for five years, before largely retiring from political cartooning in 1981 – although he continued to publish the "Pickering’s Playmates" calendars, and some of his work continued to appear in
The Bulletin. Publishing his cartoons online, Pickering became involved in political commentary through his blog "The Pickering Post", where he ran a series of posts in 2012 attacking Prime Minister
Julia Gillard over the
AWU affair. Gillard responded by referring to the website as "vile and
sexist", and described Pickering as a "
misogynist". He became well-known at this time for the vitriol directed at Gillard over the time she was in office. ==Controversies==