Babs Tarr

Babs Tarr
Born Barbara Tarr
(1987-11-12) November 12, 1987
Nationality American
Pseudonym(s) Babs Tarr
Notable works
Batgirl Motor Crush

Barbara Tarr (also known as Babs Tarr) is an American freelance comic book artist currently employed by DC Comics and Image Comics. She is best known for her work on Batgirl and for her Japanese-style illustrations.

Early life

Babs Tarr grew up in Charleston, South Carolina.[1] She went to Bishop England High School, after which she studied Printmaking at Osaka University of Arts and Illustration at Maryland Institute College of Art, where she received her BFA in Illustration.[2]

Career

Tarr worked as a game artist at MindSnacks.

In 2014, her Japanese-influenced fan art caught the eye of DC Comics which hired her to draw a new Batgirl series.[3] She later became the first long-term female artist to work on a Bat-Comic.[4] Since then, she has been hired by Young Animal, Marvel Comics, and Image Comics.[5] As her previous focus was primarily illustration, early issues of her work on Batgirl were sketched out by Cameron Stewart, and then passed over to Tarr to color, add details to, and enhance.[6] Since then, Tarr has illustrated and done the covers for other DC Comics series, such as Black Canary and Gotham Academy.[7] She has also worked for Hasbro, Disney, Boom! Comics, The San Francisco Chronicle, The Boston Globe, and Brand X. Her manga-inspired style has become more popular after Batgirl's popularity in the comic book industry, and it has found its way into other comics that Tarr has worked on.

Tarr's Sailor Moon Motorcycle Girls illustration (found on her personal page) became very popular and ultimately inspired Cameron Stewart and Brenden Fletcher to write two villains for Batgirl #36 based on Tarr's illustration.[8]

In 2016, Tarr stopped working on Batgirl and moved on to work on Image Comics' Motor Crush series where she worked as an artist and writer.[9]

Bibliography

Artist

  • Batgirl vol. 1: The Batgirl of Burnside
  • Batgirl vol. 2: Family Business
  • Batgirl vol. 3: Mindfields
  • Batgirl #35–50 (2014)
  • DC Sneak Peek: Batgirl (2015)
  • Motor Crush #1–5, 7–11
  • Batgirl: A Celebration of 50 Years (2017)
  • Batgirl: An Adult Coloring Book (2017)

Variant Cover

  • Batgirl #52 (2016)
  • Black Canary #1–2
  • Gotham Academy #6 (2015)
  • Justice League #39 (2015)
  • Bombshells United #1
  • Doom Patrol #1
  • Southern Bastards #16 (2017)

Cover

  • Batgirl #44, 45, 47–52
  • Batgirl #1–3
  • Convergence Superboy #1–2 (2015)
  • Mighty Morphin Power Rangers: Pink (2017)
  • Motor Crush #2–11
  • Southern Bastards #19 (2017)

Penciller

  • Young Gotham Sampler

Writer:

  • Motor Crush #4–11

References

  1. BABS to the BONE. Twitter. Retrieved October 1, 2015.
  2. Tarr, Barbara. "Babs Tarr Info". BabsBabsbabs.
  3. Haire, Chris (April 22, 2015). "Mt. Pleasant's Babs Tarr joins the Bat Family and helps give Batgirl a much-needed Veronica Mars makeover". Charleston City Paper.
  4. Neumann, Caryn (2015). "The Fan and the Female Superhero in Comic Books". Journal of Fandom Studies. 3: 291–302.
  5. Tarr, Barbara. "Babs Tarr Info". babsbabsbabs.
  6. http://womenwriteaboutcomics.com/2014/12/09/zooming-in-on-badass-ladies-interview-with-babs-tarr/
  7. http://www.dccomics.com/talent/babs-tarr
  8. Ochoa, Randy Z. (2015). "Babs of Burnside -- An Interview with Batgirl Artist Babs Tarr". We the Nerdy.
  9. Pitts, Lan (2016). "Babs Tarr Says Goodbye to Batgirl and Hints at What's Next on IMAGE COMICS".
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