РефератыИностранный языкGiGil Kane Essay Essay Research Paper Gil

Gil Kane Essay Essay Research Paper Gil

Gil Kane Essay Essay, Research Paper


Gil Kane


Eli Katz was born in Latvia on April 6, 1926. His family emigrated to New York in 1929, while


he was still 3 years old. An avid reader of comics and pulps, gil broke into the comic field in


1941 as an assistant in the Jack Binder shop erasing pencils and eventually became an inker


and penciler while still there


Also during this time he began drawing comics for MLJ, the publishers of Archie. He drew


the Scarlet Avenger for almost two years at MLJ and at the same time free-lanced at Street


and Smith, Quality, Holyoke and then Timely Comics as well.


He worked for Joe Simon and Jack Kirby during 1943-44, and here he said he learned many


things from Kirby.


Then he made a career move that would mark his future in comics and inextricably tie his name to the field. That


move was to begin working for DC National shortly before going into the army in 1944.


When he returned home he went back to DC, illustrating whatever characters they gave him. He drew Wildcat and


the Sandman and still he free-lanced at other companies as well. There was barely a company that didn’t benefit


from his services during this period.


click the art to see a larger image of this panel


All through the fifties, Gil continued to free-lance work, but through out this time he maintained a steady paycheck


working at DC, illustrating everything from mysteries and science fiction to Rex the Wonder Dog and his favorites,


westerns.


Gil was one of those versatile artists whose career was not


particularly disturbed by the comic witch-hunt of the period


and the subsequent forming of the Comics Code Authority in


1954. He continued working steadily and was on hand when


the next big moment in comics would arrive.


During this period that he would gain his recognition


however. In 1956 DC editor Julius Schwartz let artists Joe


Kubert and Carmine Infantino revive the golden age


character, the Flash. Immediately thereafter, Jack Kirby


introduced the Challengers of the Unknown, followed by


several other new super heroes, including Adam Strange in


Showcase Comics #17, illustrated by Gil Kane.


The character proved to be very popular and was given his own regular feature in Mystery in Space – BUT


DRAWN BY CARMINE INFANTINO! Somehow, Gil had not retained the character, an oddity at DC.


Then he helped to re-introduce another golden age


character. The Green Lantern first re- appeared in


Showc

ase #22. He was very simply, a smash! Not long after


Green Lantern appeared in his three issue run of Showcase


(#’s 22-24), he appeared on the newsstands in his own title,


and Gil illustrated the covers and the interiors. It was to


become one of the most popular books of the silver age era.


A couple of years later, Gil helped re-introduce another


golden age super hero – the Atom – in Showcase #34. He had


another hit on his hands and began illustrating another


character in his own title. Gil was now the lead artist on two


super hero comic titles, and still he drew sci-fi and fantasy


stories for DC. Finally however Gil had “burned out” on the


DC titles and began doing free-lance work at Tower Comics for Thunder Agents, and over at King for Flash


Gordon. He also started working at Marvel again.


Then he left DC doing his last regular Green Lantern with issue #61 coming back for #’s 68-75. He would not be


associated with this title again for about ten years. His last issue of the Atom is #38.


He stayed at Marvel for a period doing the Hulk, Conan, Captain Marvel, Spider-Man, Captain America, the


Avengers and many others. He produced work of such high quality at this time that it was obvious that Gil had


become one of the masters of the comic field, and many began to emulate his stylized interpretation of the comic


medium. Dave Cockrum’s artwork for the New X-Men is one of the most obvious examples of this emulation.


In 1971, Gil wrote and illustrated what would be recognized


as the first Graphic novel. Titled Blackmark, the sci-fantasy


epic was a financial disaster, but it was a critical success.


He also created the Morbius villain in Spider-Man #101, and


Iron Fist in Marvel Premiere. Iron Fist was an interesting


creation as it preceded the martial arts explosion of the


middle seventies due to the popularity of Bruce Lee’s and


Jackie Chan’s films.


After leaving Marvel Gil created and drew the Starhawks


comic strip for almost five years, maintaining an absence


from comic books.


He came back to DC doing all sorts of comic titles, not being identified with any particular character at this time.


Then he moved out to California, becoming closely associated with the development of cartoons for


Hanna-Barbera. During the last five years, he has re-entered the comic book field doing a book here and there, but


his greatest contribution today is his constant appearances at comic book conventions around the country.


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