Kevin Nowlan

Kevin Nowlan (born 1958)[1] is an American comics artist who works as a penciler, inker, colorist, and letterer. He has been called "one of the few artists who can be called 'artists's artist'", a master of the various disciplines of comic production, from "design to draftsmanship to dramatics".[2]

Kevin Nowlan
Nowlan at Special Edition NYC
Born1958
Nebraska
NationalityAmerican
Area(s)Writer, Penciller, Inker
Notable works
Tomorrow Stories
AwardsInkwell Award for Favorite Finisher/Embellisher (2008)
Inkwell Award for The Joe Sinnott Hall of Fame Award (2011)
Inkpot Award (2015)
http://members.cox.net/nowlanink/63.html

Early life

Kevin Nowlan was born in 1958 in Nebraska.[3] He has four older brothers and sisters. His brother read comic books, particularly DC Comics titles, and Nowlan has had comics around him since he can remember.[4] As an illustrator, Nowlan is mostly self-taught, but did attend a trade school for approximately a year and a half to learn design and layout.[5]

Career

Nowlan first came to the industry's attention in the early 1980s via illustrations in the fan press, most notably The Comics Journal and Amazing Heroes.[1][5]

Nowlan's first published work for Marvel Comics was Doctor Strange #57 (Feb. 1983).[3][6] He has worked for DC Comics and other comics publishers. He contributed to the adult Penthouse Comix. In 1992, he inked the Batman: Sword of Azrael miniseries which introduced the character Azrael.[7] He drew the short story "The Castle" in Vertigo Jam #1 (Aug. 1993) which featured the Sandman and was part of "The Kindly Ones" story arc.[8] One of Nowlan's prominent contribution to comics is the creation of Jack B. Quick with writer Alan Moore. This character appeared several times in Tomorrow Stories under the America's Best Comics imprint.[6]

Although the majority of his work is as an inker, he has provided both pencils and lettering for various comics. He is a noted cover illustrator. Nowlan contributed character designs to Batman: The Animated Series, most notably The Penguin, The Mad Hatter and the Man-Bat.

Nowlan has described himself as a "finisher" rather than an inker, although only in specific reference to work "where you see too much of me", and has expressed an ambivalence towards this role, saying "it's not the right way to ink someone else's pencils".[5]

His style gives a strong emphasis towards both facial expression and posture, and in neither case is he constrained by the conventions of the comic-book hero, and his protagonists are often depicted with awkward expressions or body postures.

Steve Gerber's posthumous Man-Thing story The Screenplay of the Living Dead Man, with art by Nowlan, originally planned as a 1980s graphic novel before being left uncompleted by the artist,[9] was revived in the 2010s and appeared as a three-issue miniseries cover-titled The Infernal Man-Thing (Early Sept.-Oct. 2012).[10] The story was a sequel to Gerber's “Song-Cry of the Living Dead Man” in Man-Thing #12 (Dec. 1974).[9]

Nowlan inked the 1990s variant cover penciled by Dan Jurgens for Action Comics #1000 (June 2018)[11] and inked the "Actionland!" chapter drawn by José Luis García-López in that same issue.[6]

Awards

Bibliography

Nowlan colors and inks over his own pencils unless noted otherwise:

  • Doctor Strange (Marvel):
    • "Gather My Disciples Before Me!" (with Roger Stern, inks by Terry Austin and colors by Bob Sharen, in vol. 2 #57, 1983)
    • "The Coming Slaughter" (with Jason Aaron, co-feature, in vol. 4 #1, 2015)
    • "Mistress Miraclous" (with Jason Aaron, among other artists, co-feature, in vol. 4 #6, 2016)
    • "The New Face of Magic" (with Jason Aaron and Leonardo Romero, in vol. 4 #11, 2016)
    • "The Weird, the Weirder, and the Weirdest" (with Jason Aaron and Chris Bachalo, in vol. 4 #20, 2017)
    • "Past and Present" (with John Barber, Juan Manuel Frigeri and colors by Dan Brown, in vol. 4 #25, 2017)
    • "The Lever" (with Mark Waid and colors by Jim Campbell, co-feature, in vol. 5 #10, 2019)
  • Moon Knight (with colors by Christie Scheele, Marvel):
  • Dalgoda #2-6: "Grimwood's Daughter" (with Jan Strnad and colors by Kenneth Smith, anthology, Fantagraphics Books, 1985)
  • The Outsiders Annual #1: "The Skull... the Serpent... and the Outsiders" (with Mike W. Barr, DC Comics, 1986)
  • The New Mutants #51: "Teacher's Choice" (with Chris Claremont and colors by Glynis Oliver, Marvel, 1987)
  • Tales of the Green Lantern Corps Annual #3: "A Sense of Obligation" (with Richard Bruning, co-feature, DC Comics, 1987)
  • Plastic Man vol. 3 #1-4 ("reality check" framing sequence; with Phil Foglio and Hilary Barta, DC Comics, 1988–1989)
  • Secret Origins vol. 2 #39: "The Secret Origin of Man-Bat" (with Jan Strnad, anthology, DC Comics, 1989)
  • A1 #4: "The Hero of the Tale" (with Jan Strnad, anthology, Atomeka, 1990)
  • Vertigo Jam: "The Castle" (with Neil Gaiman and colors by Daniel Vozzo, anthology one-shot, Vertigo, 1993)
  • The Big Book of Urban Legends: "Curses! Broiled Again!" (with Jan Harold Brunvand, anthology, Paradox Press, 1994)
  • Penthouse Comix (anthology, Penthouse):
    • "Scion" (with George Caragonne and additional inks by John Nyberg (#3), in #1-4, 1994)
    • "Rod in Hell" (with Dave Johnson (as writer and main artist) and colors by Bad @ss, in #29, 1998)
  • Batman Black and White #4: "Monsters in the Closet" (with Jan Strnad, anthology, DC Comics, 1996)
  • Aliens: Havoc #1 (with Mark Schultz and colors by Pamela Rambo, among other artists, Dark Horse, 1997)
  • Gen¹³ vol. 2 #36: "No Good Deed" (with John Arcudi and colors by Laura DePuy, co-feature, Wildstorm, 1998)
  • Tomorrow Stories (anthology, America's Best Comics):
    • "Smalltown Stardom" (with Alan Moore and colors separations by Wildstorm FX, in #1, 1999)
    • "The Unbearableness of Being Light" (with Alan Moore and color separations by Ben Dimagmaliw, in #2, 1999)
    • "Pet Theory" (with Alan Moore and color separations by Alex Bleyaert, in #3, 1999)
    • "A Brief Geography of Time"" (with Alan Moore and colors by Wildstorm FX, in #4, 2000)
    • "Jack B. Quick's Amazing World of Science!" (with Alan Moore, in ABC Special one-shot, 2001)
    • "Why the Long Face?" (with Alan Moore, in #10, 2001)
    • "The Facts of Life!" (with Alan Moore, in #12, 2002)
    • "Jack B. Quick" (with Peter Hogan and colors by Michelle Madsen, in ABC: A to Z #1, co-feature, 2005)
    • "I, Robert" (with Alan Moore and colors by Michelle Madsen, in Tomorrow Stories Special #1, co-feature, 2006)
  • Green Lantern/Superman: Legend of the Green Flame: "Chapter Four" (with Neil Gaiman, one-shot, DC Comics, 2000)
  • 9-11 Volume 1: "Untitled" (with an anonymous writer, two pages in anthology graphic novel, Dark Horse, 2002)
  • 52 #13, 20 (with Mark Waid, "Origins" co-features, DC Comics, 2006)
  • The Goon: Noir #2: "Man of the Hour" (with John Arcudi, anthology, Dark Horse, 2006)
  • X-Men: First Class Special: "The Museum of Oddities" (with Jeff Parker, co-feature, Marvel, 2007)
  • Hellboy: Buster Oakley Gets His Wish (with Mike Mignola, one-shot, Dark Horse, 2011)
  • The Infernal Man-Thing #1-3: "The Screenplay of the Living Dead Man" (with Steve Gerber, Marvel, 2012)
  • The Graveyard Book (with P. Craig Russell and colors by Lovern Kindzierski, graphic novels, HarperCollins):
    • "1: How Nobody Came to the Graveyard" (in Volume 1, 2013)
    • "8: Leavings and Partings" (with additional inks by Galen Showman, in Volume 2, 2014)
  • Lobster Johnson (with Mike Mignola and John Arcudi, one-shots, Dark Horse):
    • Satan Smells a Rat (2013)
    • A Chain Forged in Life (two pages of framing sequence, 2015)
  • Abe Sapien #23: "The Ogopogo" (with Scott Allie, Dark Horse, 2015)

Covers only

As an inker

As a letterer

Notes

  1. Per Bob Schreck commentary in the "Contents" page, this story was originally intended for publication in Secret Origins vol. 2 but was not printed at that time as it had mysteriously vanished. After some pressure from Mike Mignola and a few phone calls, Schreck was able to track it down.

References

  1. "Kevin Nowlan". Lambiek Comiclopedia. May 15, 2009. Archived from the original on July 16, 2012. Retrieved January 4, 2013.
  2. Chiarello, Mark, ed.; Peterson, Scott (1996). Batman: Black & White, Vol. 1. DC Comics. ISBN 978-1401215897.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  3. Solinas, Antonio (2006). "The thin black line: a Kevin Nowlan interview". De-code.net. Archived from the original on February 7, 2012.
  4. Nolen-Weathington, Eric (2004). Modern Masters Volume Four: Kevin Nowlan. Raleigh, North Carolina: TwoMorrows Publishing. ISBN 978-1893905382.
  5. Irving, Christopher (n.d.). "More Than Just an Inker: An Interview with Kevin Nowlan". Richmondcomix.com. Archived from the original on January 8, 2008.
  6. Kevin Nowlan at the Grand Comics Database
  7. Manning, Matthew K.; Dolan, Hannah, ed. (2010). "1990s". DC Comics Year By Year A Visual Chronicle. London, United Kingdom: Dorling Kindersley. p. 255. ISBN 978-0-7566-6742-9. Azrael, one of the most important characters of the modern Batman mythos, was dropped right under the noses of an unsuspecting reading populace in the debut issue of Batman: Sword of Azrael by esteemed bat-scribe Denny O'Neil, talented young penciler Joe Quesada, and inker extraordinaire Kevin Nowlan.CS1 maint: extra text: authors list (link)
  8. Bender, Hy (1999). The Sandman Companion. New York, New York: DC Comics. p. 270. ISBN 978-1563894657.
  9. Arrant, Chris (September 21, 2011). "The Next Big-Wait Project Emerges: Man-Thing by Gerber and Nowlan". Comic Book Resources. Archived from the original on January 1, 2012. Retrieved February 14, 2013.
  10. Infernal Man-Thing at the Grand Comics Database
  11. "DC Unveils Final Variant For Action Comics #1000". Previews. Diamond Comic Distributors. March 7, 2018. Archived from the original on August 8, 2018.
  12. Almond, Bob (November 2, 2011). "Inkwell Awards 2011 Winners". Inkwell Awards. Archived from the original on March 19, 2016.
  13. YouTube - Kevin Nowlan - Heroes Convention 2011
  14. "Inkpot Award". San Diego Comic-Con. 2016. Archived from the original on January 29, 2017.
  15. Nowlan, Kevin (January 2, 2010). "Gil Kane's WildC.A.T.S./Aliens cover". Kevinnowlan.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on October 13, 2016.
  16. Nowlan, Kevin (July 6, 2010). "Hellboy logo rough". Kevinnowlan.blogspot.com. Archived from the original on October 13, 2016.
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