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Influenced By
The following arits have influenced by the art of Richard Corben.
Simon Bisley, comic
artist, illustrator (among
others "Slaine", "Lobo", "Judge Dredd", and for Heavy Metal).
"There's [Frank Frazetta,]
Mike McMahon, Kevin O'Neill,
jeeze,
Bill
Sienkiwicz, Corben." [Mr.
Bisley counts his favourites
in an Interview on Comic
Art & Graffix Gallery
Artist (page 5/5)]
Mr. Bisley even used Den
as a side character in "Slaine"!
BTW, The supporting dwarf
of Slaine is called
"Ukko", which is pure
Finnish word. It means "old
man" (though the name is from the author - I do not know if he's aware of the connection
or is it just coinsident)!
Gerald Brom, an American
illustrator. Born 1965.
"I thrived on Richard
Corben when I
was growing up." [Interview
on web site BromArt]
John Cebollero, an American
illustrator, comic artist
and sculptor (color and art
in Forbidden Zone #1 (1999), colorist
for "M-80", and co-colorist for "Angel
of Andromeda". All for Galaxy). Born
1965.
"I became aware of Richard
Corben's work at a very
critical point in my development
as
an artist. Unlike many other artist
of his time, his work comes
from a very personal place.
He is simply amazing."
Jouko Nuora, a Finnish comic artist and illustrator ("Nani"). Born
1963.
"I still like Richard Corben... liked already
in 80's and prob. there is influence of his work in mine (at least in busted
ones, LMAO). " [A
private message. Jouko
Nuora web site]
Rafa Garres, a Catalan illustrator and comic artist (among others for DC
Comics, "Slaine", "Jaguar God", and "Lobo").
"You will see his influence hide on many of my work."
[A private message. Rafa Garres web site]
John Higgins, a British illustrator and comic artst.
"My initial major influences
were Richard
Corben,
Frank Frazetta, and Neil
Adams." [AD
Review - John Higgins Interview
(page 1/3)]
Salvador Larrocca, a
Spanish comic artist (among
others for Marvel). Born
1964.
"Lots of [artists have influenced my work], too many to remember
them now, but the first one was Richard Corben and
Juan Gimenez (Heavy Metal). I started on the comics due [to] their influence."
Gaetano (Tanino) Liberatore, an Italian illustrator and comic artist
(the creator of "Rank Xerox").
Born 1953.
"-- Corben the Great. -- I first discovered -- Den. I don't
know how much time I spent looking at each frame", quotes in his
introduction for Richard Corben's Werewolf
(1984). [See
also fan
web site, incl. Richard Corben introduction
for Ranxerox in New York].
Mike Mignola, a comic artist
I've loved his work since i was very young. [See 5 Questions With...Mike
Mignola]
Bryan Talbot, a British
comic artist
Comix:
the Underground Revolution
(2004) mentions
his 1978 opening story for
character Luther Arkwright, "Papist
Affair" (from Near Myths)
to be "a seven-page
Moorcock
á la Corben-style strip".
José Villarrubia,
a Spanish digital artist,
photographer and computercolorist
(studied in 90s in Baltimore,
and several works for Alan
Moore)
He says in his Slush
Factory Entertainment Interview,
by Zack Smith (dated
23rd April 2003),
two times, how Richard
Corben was his
all time favourite
artist, a hero. [Colorist
for Max
Comics: Cage,
and The
Punisher (cover
art) for Marvel.]
[See also
An
Interview with José
Villarrubia]
Will Eisner, an American comic artist, the creator of The Spirit.
"Corben's work is singular in it's humanity. He works with towering
technical skill... And the wonderous thing of it all is that underneath
all that technical tour-de-force is the sound of a beating heart".
Robert Crumb, an American comic artist (U-comics, picts)
"Corben's stuff was great. He put stuff into his comix that the overground
press wouldn't print" [Conversations]
Frank Miller, an American comic artist
"I feel like I was
particularly impresed by Richard Corben's work. But in general I would
not say the underground made that big of an impression
except for Corben... His science-ficiton stories, those almost primitive
black and white comics he did back then. I was very struck by the visceral
punch
they had, by the unusual artistic point of view. And also by the unabashed
exaggeration. It's as if you wanted a woman to have big breast, you drew
it. There was something just so joyously excessive and erotic about jso
stuff, that I jsut ate it up."
Gillermo del Toro, a Spanish movie maker
"The artist I most want to aspire to is Richard Corben. His style is
visual and it tells the story just as you see it... ...my favorite is Corben.
I love everything he does, I love his stuf ...he's an amazing
artist."
Copyright © 2004 Heart-Attack-Series,
Ink!,
Created: July 25, 2004. Modified:
July 3, 2008.
