The artist sister of cartoonist Michael Leunig has described his recent work which showed a baby falling out of a pram while its mother was distracted by her phone, as "feminist baiting".

Key points: Mary Leunig said she felt her brother's recent cartoon was "having a go at women"

Mary Leunig said she felt her brother's recent cartoon was "having a go at women" She said she did not believe her brother understood how hard mothers worked, or that many are also juggling careers

She said she did not believe her brother understood how hard mothers worked, or that many are also juggling careers Ms Leunig recreated a cartoon depicting herself shooting her brother in the bottom, but adding a mother pushing a pram

Mary Leunig said she believed her brother's cartoon was "attention-grabbing" and designed to make women angry.

"He does that sort of stuff, doesn't he? A bit of feminist baiting and a bit of, I don't know, making women angry," she told ABC Radio Melbourne.

"I think he kind of enjoys that, in a way.

"I don't usually respond to Michael's work — a lot of it is excellent. But that particular cartoon, I felt he really was baiting."

In response to the controversy, Ms Leunig recreated a cartoon she had previously drawn of herself shooting her brother in the bottom.

Loading

In the updated version, posted to her Facebook page on Wednesday, Ms Leunig added a mother pushing a baby in a pram looking at the pair as she walked by.

Ms Leunig said she created the original cartoon after she had "a falling out" with her brother.

Cartoon 'picking on mothers'

She said she felt her brother's recent cartoon was "having a go at women".

"And that's mean I think, when you're picking on mothers, knowing how difficult it is to raise kids," she said.

"And I do know mothers. I was talking to a mother of two little kids yesterday and I know how hard they work and I know they have careers as well and I understand that, and I don't think he does."

Michael Leunig declined to be interviewed on the controversy around his cartoon but told ABC Radio Melbourne's Mornings program that experience had taught him "not to trust the ABC".

"The ruthless power imbalance experienced by many interviewees on the ABC can be deeply disturbing and degrading," he said.

After the cartoon was published in Melbourne's The Age newspaper on October 23, Mr Leunig was accused of unfairly judging mothers by suggesting some love their phones and Instagram more than their children.

Feminist author Clementine Ford said Leunig's cartoon amounted to "condescending judgement".

"I bet you never spent hours walking babies around in a pram, feeling isolated and alone and terrified," she wrote in a tweet.

'Reasonable' reminder for all parents

But others argued that mothers and parents becoming distracted by their phones in 2019 was a legitimate target for a cartoon.

"Leunig is just making a point," former Liberal minister and Age columnist Amanda Vanstone tweeted.

"I think it's ok. Not fantastic, but ok."

On Twitter, father Paul Zauch said he found the cartoon a "simple, clever, gentle" reminder that he was often more engaged with his phone than his daughter.

Loading

Loading

Meanwhile, others took to Twitter to "fix" the cartoon.

Loading