I've noticed that when I see discusion about comics and good artists, only guy's names are mentioned. Are there any awesome female comic book artists?
Female comic artists?
I've noticed that when I see discusion about comics and good artists, only guy's names are mentioned. Are there any awesome female comic book artists?
Son, if you really want something in this life you have to work for it. Now quiet they're about to announce the lottery numbers.
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Rebecca Guay, though she's maybe more a painter than comic artist these days
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In North America? Linda Medley and my bud Nina Matsumoto jump to mind. [EDIT] Oh! And Johane Matte who's done work in Flight and I adore her Horus book (she also puts up pages on DA). The femmes tend to be indie or the new wave of japanese-inspired (I'm sure you know of the vast amount of female comic artists in JPN).
You might try browsing Sequential Tart, though they do review all comics and not just female-only.
Last edited by Mirana; May 15th, 2008 at 09:44 PM.
Jan Duursema -- Star Wars comics
Fiona Staples -- cover and interior artist (Sheena, Red Sonja, Jack Hawksmoor [Wildstorm])
Claire Wendling (her sketchbooks are A-AWESOME)
Pia Guerra ("Y - The Last Man", lotsa others) gallery here: http://www.hellkitty.com/gallery.htm
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Last edited by FlipMcgee; May 15th, 2008 at 09:51 PM.
There are lots: Alison Bechdel, Jessical Abel, the brilliant Melinda Gebbie, who's married to Alan Moore. Gebbie is a chameleon, capable of changing styles without sweat. Below is a homage to Max Ernst's collage novels that she did with Moore.
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Becky Cloonan, Jill Thompson, Kate Beaton, Tove Jansson, the bazillion female manga artists and loads of webcomic artists...
Heck, there's a huge list of female comic creators which has handy markings on who's an artist: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of...omics_creators (of which I'm sure loads are awesome)
Oh crap, this was a necro. CURSES!
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If boring JC can come back from the dead, I'm sure so can an actually worthwhile topic![]()
Last edited by Elwell; November 2nd, 2011 at 07:45 AM.
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Tristan Elwell
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Vera Brosgol (She's mostly into animation but she has done comics from time to time.)
Hiromu Arakawa
Jen Wang
Wendy Pini
Emily Warren
Christina Strain
Tinybird covered the Wiki list.
If you also count Japanese comics (manga) there ARE A LOT.
Check these out too:
Rotor - GoGoJoJo
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Red Sonja gets a pass on the scale mail bikini, both since she was the first and because it's become a defining character element, similar to Power Girl's boob window. But if every female character dresses like that by default, then it stops being interesting and just becomes ridiculous.
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I think Power Girl's boob window is a defining element because the male writers want it to be. Her breasts became progressively bigger as time moved on. In the '70s they were normal. But an artist could tone them down again. A writer could stop making self-aware jokes about them in the stories. No to mention in the '80s she wore costumes without cleavage.
It's just that the current creators of DC like T&A.
And if I were a hot warrior woman I'd wear threads that are useful in a fight. Like something that actually protects anything and doesn't ride my crotch easily.
EDIT: Not to mention if your opponent is a woman, a dragon, wolf or any other animal or any soldier who has been trained to not be distracted, it's not gonna help at all.
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I posted this in the General Comics thread but this is relevant.
http://www.comicsalliance.com/2011/1...erhero-comics/
I think your analogy is stupid because I'm tired of the male gaze. Hehe it's so funny...like I never heard of THAT line before. VARIETY fool. No one is saying no more sexuality with women, but not every woman needs to be some kind of wank material for someone's penis.Kurt Busiek (Kirby: Genesis, Astro City): My argument, over and over, is that "sexy" isn't the problem. Sameness is the problem. Don't make all women look the same. Don't make them act the same. Give us a range of portrayals, like the men.
One of the reasons I liked X-men was for its diversity of women. I have to applaud Claremont for at least doing that.
For example Storm. I've seen her go through so many transformations but her core character is a strong woman. She could wear a Mohawk, she can kick ass and she can look sexy in some her outfits but not every outfit she wore was some kind of masturbation material.
Jean Grey, I've always felt was just a tool for the men around her, via Scott being in love with her, the attraction to the hairy shortstuff Wolverine, and rather creepy Xavier's lust for her too. She finally got more of a personality as Phoenix, killed a planet of people then died (then resurrected, and killed again...whatever).
Rogue, frequently covered up due to her ability to absorb people to the point of death from skin to skin contact. I guess we can easily make her the emo goth girl, but what happened? Claremont made her spunky and flirty. That's some good character exploration.
So when you have characters that display that kind of variety, I can forgive or look over the stupid outfits of the females in particular for the Hellfire clubbecause, at least there was a variety of characters, some sexy with the outfits, others are still strong characters. I can forgive them taking a purple haired British girl into a scantily clad Asian fetish assassin.
I like DC's Amanda Waller, you have this big Black woman that actually is a threat. That's what the audience needs to worry about, not if she's bangable. Course witht eh re-launch someone had to screw that up, along with the movies. No, I like the fact a fat Black woman is a threat. She doesn't need to be pretty to be threatening.
Last edited by Arshes Nei; November 3rd, 2011 at 10:26 AM.
I read that article some weeks ago; I thought it painted a depressing, but accurate, picture of mainstream (and not so mainstream) comics. I think what we need is more women writing and drawing comics; especially drawing comics. I'm pretty sure (I hope) the writer doesn't tell the penciller to draw the heroine from an angle that allows us to see her ass, crotch and tits in the same panel. That's certainly an artistic choice. And I think women drawing superheroes could help prevent that or change sensibilities.
But, you know, where the hell are they?
Amanda Conner was the artist for Power Girl for some time. Make what you will of that.
Last edited by Psychotime; November 3rd, 2011 at 12:48 PM.
What you'd wear is a bra with lots of support so the pain of your boobs jiggling around wouldn't distract you, and weather-appropriate clothing because both sunburn and frostbite really suck. You would also wear shoes you could run away in.
It's not that the clothing is sexy, it's that it's dumb. It would be like me starting a comic company and putting all the male characters in assless chaps and clown makeup and then trying to get you to treat these characters seriously. You can't. It's stupid. Nobody reasonable would do this. It's like having to put up with someone else's fetish. Like you're reading a story and getting into it and suddenly the camera seems to focus on everybody's feet in half the panels or everybody inexplicably gets into fursuits with giant genitals and goes off to fight crime. You start getting the idea that there's an agenda here you didn't sign up for. Which is too bad because I enjoyed the stories and the heroes as people.
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I think Power girl is fine as she is, just like I don't mind She Hulk, Ms. Marvel or Wonder Woman's leotard. We have Batgirls, The New Huntress outfit (which I like much better than that bellyshirt bullshit http://dcwomenkickingass.tumblr.com/...hutresshistory), Dust, Rocket etc...
Zantanna is a stage magician so I was fine with her fishnets and leotards. Even during the Young Justice cartoon, they updated her look to something more sensible vs the Corsette and pants look in the DC reboot. She still looks like a stage magician in the Young Justice cartoon.
And in Marvel, look at the new Avengers cartoon - "Earth's Mightiest Heroes" (Disney) http://disney.go.com/xd/avengers/
I like the fact that you got different body types and personalities by the women. Wasp is more cute even though she's an adult. I'm fine with that. Black Widow is more sexy. Even Mockingbird's brief appearance was interesting, and people can argue about her costume. Black Widow wasn't afraid to have boobs and ass in a cartoon - that's fine and as long as you have contrast it's better. Wasp's design actually helped with that. The team can use a few more women, but I'm gathering from teasers about the new season, that's what's going to happen.
But we already discussed variety is fine. Sameness is not.
I don't even know if "more girls drawing comics" is a solution in some ways either.
There is so much of that depressing, vacant eyed, girl in fantasy illustrations it also drives me crazy. It's like two ends of the spectrum that really should be seeking a middle ground.
Last edited by Arshes Nei; November 3rd, 2011 at 01:46 PM.
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Tristan Elwell
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