Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label artist. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 April 2021

Local artist draws tougher, older Batman for DC Comics


Local artist draws tougher, older Batman for DC Comics: Comic book fans are making their way to a north side store to not only meet local indigenous artist Kyle Charles, but to see first hand his latest creation.
 

 

 “A light beard on him, and like a little wider frame, a bit older, just a little bit tougher looking... it's awesome to be able to draw that form of Batman in the Dark Knight returns style, so I had a lot of fun with it,” Charles told CTV News.

Saturday, 14 November 2020

Edmonton comic book illustrator recruited for Marvel’s Indigenous series

 
 

An Edmonton comic book illustrator is joining the Marvel team to illustrate part of a new anthology.

Kyle Charles received an email from Marvel Comics in August, asking if he would be a part of Marvel’s Voices: Indigenous Voices Volume 1.

“I just couldn’t believe it,” he said. “Usually you have to fight to get in to Marvel. You have a lot to prove. For them to come to me… it was unexpected.”

For the anthology, Charles worked on the story of Danielle “Dani” Moonstar and drew a brand new Indigenous mutant for the X-Men series.

“Dani Moonstar is an Indigenous female mutant,” he said. “She’s got wicked powers. She’s part of the New Mutants, that was really punk rock back in the 80s.”

 
 https://globalnews.ca/video/rd/95980558-2616-11eb-8e95-0242ac110003/?jwsource=cl

Sunday, 12 February 2017

BATMAN & THE SHADOW Crossover With SNYDER, ORLANDO, ROSSMO


 Y'know what's cool about this? The Artist is from CALGARY


 Starting in April, DC Comics will team up with Dynamite to publish Batman/Shadow, a team-up between the Dark Knight and the classic pulp hero. According to a solicitation found on ComiXology, the series will be written by Scott Snyder and Steve Orlando, with art from Riley Rossmo.


Wednesday, 5 October 2016

Arrow Premiere to Feature Police Sketch from Neal Adams

Arrow Premiere to Feature Police Sketch from Neal Adams
It looks like George Pérez won’t be the only revered DC artist contributing a police sketch to the season 5 premiere of “Arrow.” Neal Adams, who is best known for his pencils on “Batman” and “Detective Comics” in the 1970s, will also be providing a sketch, but of the Emerald Archer himself.

Saturday, 13 August 2016

Saturday, 30 April 2016

Batman and Velma Team Up in DARK KNIGHT RETURNS and SCOOBY-DOO Mashup Art

Artist Marco D’Alfonso is back with another humorous illustration that mashes together Frank Miller’s The Dark Knight Returns with Hanna Barbera’s Scooby-Doo. The art was created for The Line is Drawn’s Hanna-Barbera/Comic Book mashup series

Monday, 8 February 2016

Wedding Photos?

One of the BEST Fan interpretations I've seen in awhile.

If anybody objects to this union, speak now or forever hold your peace.-Red Hood
Posted by Batman Memes on Friday, 5 February 2016

Friday, 11 December 2015

Superheroes At Retirement Age

http://geektyrant.com/news/heres-what-superheroes-would-look-like-at-retirement-age

 Eddie Liu, an artist from Shanghai, has his own thoughts about the aged versions of superheroes. Liu has interpreted the images of Superman, Batman, Wonder Woman and The Flash in quite an interesting way. In the artist’s recreation, the youthfulness of the characters looks to be long gone, but still, the artist manages to preserve an essential part of their sublimity.
Check out the link above for larger format pics. 


Thursday, 4 June 2015

Monday, 6 April 2015

Batman Limited Edition Collection

In this tense 60-second short film, Grammy-nominated director Edson Oda brings the seedy underbelly of Gotham City alive on the pages of Moleskine notebooks to celebrate the launch of the Moleskine Batman Limited Edition Collection. Batman arrives on the cover of a Moleskine notebook – one of five designs that celebrate the urban superhero's comic book heritage. The ivory-colored pages inside the notebooks are for sketching your own Batsuit, Batsignal or sinister cityscapes. Themed stickers are contained in the back pocket.
Read more about it at the link above!

Thursday, 2 April 2015

Joker Cosplay = Perfection

Never let it be said The Joker isn’t the sentimental type. After all, he maintains a trophy wall, as depicted in a 2005 commission by Brian Bolland. With a lot of work, and some help from friends, cosplayer Anthony Misiano (aka Harley’s Joker) has brought that illustration to life in an unnerving homage.
“Believe it or not, altogether roughly 45 photos were used in the final composition, 16 of which just for the Joker alone,” Misiano wrote on Facebook. “You’d never guess how much work really does go into it all.”

Monday, 2 March 2015

Calgary artist creates amazing makeup magic

Calgary artist creates amazing makeup magic | CTV Calgary News
click the link for video...

A Calgary makeup artist and comic book fan is gaining notoriety for her ability to turn mere mortals into superheroes.
Lianne Moseley, 25, is self-trained and makes her living making-up brides and models but in her free time, she creates comic book and graphic novel characters from scratch.
“My mom sold catalogue cosmetics and right from the start, I just got right into it,” said Moseley. “In high school instead of studying I spent a lot of time practicing and doing friend’s makeup.”
She has been painting faces for two years but the comic style makeup is a recent addition to her skill set.

Wednesday, 18 February 2015

Check out 10 Awesome B&W Batman Stories


“Silent Knight…Unholy Knight!” — Michael Uslan and Dave Bullock, from Volume 4
Silent movies were undeniably an influence on Bill Finger and Bob Kane’s creation of The Batman. One silent film in particular was especially formative: the 1926 film The Bat, from which the pair took several elements that defined the Dark Knight. (See this ”web page“, which looks like it was created by a sixteen-year-old in 1999, for more.) In “Silent Knight…Unholy Knight!,” Uslan and Bullock acknowledge that influence with a silent-film-with-a-comic that really manages to capture an odd mood; a synthesis of the silvery flicker of film and mechanics of sequential art. As an era-appropriate Bat-Man hunts down the villainous Unholy Knight, Bullock’s copious use of brilliant white space, delicate brush-lines, and nuanced sense of light and shade really seem to give these pages a little of the fuzzy shimmer of the early silver screen