Carmine Infantino: Difference between revisions
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===DC Comics editorial director=== |
===DC Comics editorial director=== |
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In [[1967]], Infantino was tasked with designing covers for the entire DC line. When DC was sold to [[Kinny National]], Carmine was promoted to |
In [[1967]], Infantino was tasked with designing covers for the entire DC line. When DC was sold to [[Kinny National]], Carmine was promoted to editorial director. He started by hiring new talent, and promoting artists to editorial positions. He hired [[Dick Giordano]] away from [[Charlton Comics]], and made artists [[Joe Orlando]], [[Joe Kubert]] and Mike Sekowsky editors. New talents such as [[Neal Adams]] and [[Denny O'Neil]] were injected into the company. |
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Infantino was made [[publisher]] in [[1971]], during a time of declining circulation for DC's comics. <!--The following needs citation: Complicating matters, the newly merged company's owner, [[Warner Communications]], and newsstand distributor IDN [NOTE: Is this meant to be Independent News, IND, which DC owned?] had little faith in the company beyond the marketability of its characters and newsstand and grocery stores didn't want to handle a magazine with such low profit margins.--> Infantino attempted a number of changes, includint the launch of starting several new titles. Older characters including Green Lantern, [[Green Arrow]], [[Superman]], [[Wonder Woman]] and, again, Batman were revamped to mixed results. |
Infantino was made [[publisher]] in [[1971]], during a time of declining circulation for DC's comics. <!--The following needs citation: Complicating matters, the newly merged company's owner, [[Warner Communications]], and newsstand distributor IDN [NOTE: Is this meant to be Independent News, IND, which DC owned?] had little faith in the company beyond the marketability of its characters and newsstand and grocery stores didn't want to handle a magazine with such low profit margins.--> Infantino attempted a number of changes, includint the launch of starting several new titles. Older characters including Green Lantern, [[Green Arrow]], [[Superman]], [[Wonder Woman]] and, again, Batman were revamped to mixed results. |
Revision as of 05:37, 18 December 2005
Carmine Infantino (born May 24, 1925, Brooklyn, New York City) is an American comic book artist and editor who was a major force in the Silver Age of Comic Books.
Early life and career
Carmine Infantino attended Public Schools 75 and 85 in Brooklyn before going on the High School of Industrial Arts (now the High School of Art and Design) in Manhattan. He started his comics career in the 1940s, after DC Comics editor Sheldon Mayer advised him to continue studying and practicing, then give DC another try later. The undaunted Infantino began working for the quirkily named Harry "A" Chesler, whose studio was one of a handful of comic-book "packagers" who created complete comics for publishers looking to enter the emerging field in the 1930s-'40s Golden Age of Comic Books. He later worked as an art assistant at Quality Comics before finally getting a job drawing comics at Timely Comics, the Golden Age precursor of Marvel Comics. With friend and high-school classmate Frank Giacoia penciling, Infanto inked the feature 'Jack Frost'.
Carmine bounced around several publishers during the decade, drawing Airboy and The Heap for Hillman Publications; working for packager Jack Binder, who supplied Fawcett Comics); stopping briefly at Holyoke; then landing at DC where he became a regular on the Golden Age Flash, Black Canary, Green Lantern and Justice Society of America.
During the 1950s, Infantino freelanced for Joe Simon and Jack Kirby's company, Prize Comics, drawing the series Charlie Chan, which in particular shows the influence both of Kirby's and Milton Caniff's art stules. Back at DC, during a lull in the popularity of superheroes, Infantino drew Westerns, mysteries, science fiction comics. As his style evolved, he began to shed both the Kirbyisms and the gritty shading of Caniff, and develop a clean, linear style.
Silver age artist
In 1956, DC editor Julius Schwartz assigned writer Robert Kanigher and artist Infantino to the company's first attempt at reviving superheroes: an updated version of the Flash that would appear in issue #4 (Oct. 1956) of the try-out series Showcase. Infantino designed the now-classic red uniform with yellow detail, striving to keep the costume as streamlined as possible, and he drew on his design abilities to create a new visual language to depict the Flash's speed, making the figure a red and yellow blur. The eventual success of the new, science-fictiony Flash heralded the wholesale return of superheroes, and the beginning of what fans and historians call the Silver Age of comics.
Infantino continued to work for Schwartz in his other features and titles, most notably "Adam Strange" in Strange Adventures, replacing Mike Sekowsky. In 1964, Schwartz was made resonsible for reviving the faded Batman titles. Writer John Broome and artist Infantino jettisoned the sillier aspects that had crept into the series (such as (Ace the Bathound, and Bat-Mite) and gave the "New Look" Batman and Robin a more detective-oriented direction and sleeker draftsmanship that proved a hit combination. Other features and characters Infantino drew at DC include "The Space Museum", and Elongated Man
DC Comics editorial director
In 1967, Infantino was tasked with designing covers for the entire DC line. When DC was sold to Kinny National, Carmine was promoted to editorial director. He started by hiring new talent, and promoting artists to editorial positions. He hired Dick Giordano away from Charlton Comics, and made artists Joe Orlando, Joe Kubert and Mike Sekowsky editors. New talents such as Neal Adams and Denny O'Neil were injected into the company.
Infantino was made publisher in 1971, during a time of declining circulation for DC's comics. Infantino attempted a number of changes, includint the launch of starting several new titles. Older characters including Green Lantern, Green Arrow, Superman, Wonder Woman and, again, Batman were revamped to mixed results.
The same year he was made publisher, Infantino scored a major coup in signing on Marvel Comics' star artist, Jack Kirby. Beginning with Jimmy Olsen, Kirby created his Fourth World saga that wove through that existing title and three new series he created. With sales of his comics landing below expectations, however, the titles were eventually canceled and Kirby returned to freelancing for Marvel.
In an effort to raise revenue, Infantino raised the cover price of DC's comics from 15 to 25 cents, simultaneously raising the page count by adding reprints and new backup features. Marvel met the price increase, then dropped back to 20 cents; Infantino stayed at 25 cents, a decision that ultimately proved bad for cicrulation.
After working with writer Mario Puzo on the Superman movie, Infantino collaborated with Marvel on the historic company-crossover publication Superman vs. Spider-Man. Yet before sales on that hit book had been recorded, Infantino was let go by Warner and returned to freelance work.
Later career
Infantino later drew for a number of titles for Warren Publishing and Marvel, including the latter's Star Wars, Spider-Woman, and Nova. In the 1980s, he again drew the Flash for DC. As of 2005, Infantino is retired, although he is often a guest at comic book conventions. His autobiography is The Amazing World of Carmine Infantino (Vanguard Press).