Barbara Slate | |
---|---|
Born | May 9, 1947 |
Nationality | American |
Alma mater | The Art Institute of Pittsburgh |
Occupation(s) | Creator, writer, artist, teacher |
Years active | 1975–present |
Notable work | Getting Married and Other Mistakes, You Can Do a Graphic Novel (Britannica eBook), You Can Do a Graphic Novel Teacher's Guide (Britannica eBook), Contents
|
Awards | ComicBookResources Barbara Slate Week, [1] Parent's Choice Award for the writing of Barbie and Barbie Fashion comic books, [2] Forbie Award for Sweet XVI from Marvel Comics [3] Time Out Magazine, London, England recommendation of Angel Love as "TOP 10 Comic", Cosmopolitan Magazine "Career Woman of the Month" |
Website | barbaraslate |
Barbara Slate (born May 9, 1947) is an American artist, cartoonist, graphic novelist, comic book creator, and writer. She is one of the few female artists who has created, written, and drawn comics for both DC and Marvel Comics. [4] Her textbook, You Can Do a Graphic Novel, was first published in 2010 by Alpha Books (Penguin/Putnam). [5] In 1986 Barbara created Angel Love for DC Comics, an adult-themed series for teenagers. In an exhibition review, The New York Times described her art as "emphatically of our time with its narrative of passion, gun violence, and female assertiveness." [6]
In 1974, Slate's feminist cartoon character, Ms. Liz, [7] appeared on millions of greeting cards, in a regular comic strip in Cosmopolitan magazine, and as the star in a series of animated segments on NBC's Today show in 1982. [8] Many magazines and newspapers published extensive articles about Barbara Slate and Ms. Liz. [9] Slate was interviewed about Ms. Liz for a seven-page feature in Cartoonist Profiles in 1983. [10]
Comic Book Resources began Barbara Slate Week May 13, 2013, with a column about Angel Love. [11] For Marvel Comics she created, wrote, and drew Sweet XVI, [12] wrote 65 Barbie and Barbie Fashion comics and put her own spin on the Disney films Beauty and the Beast and Pocahontas. She also wrote and did the layout for the comic New Kids on the Block for Harvey Comics and Scooby Doo for DC Comics. [13] Barbara wrote over one hundred Betty and Veronica stories for Archie Comics throughout the 1990s and 2000s. [14]
1980s: Ms. Liz was featured in Cosmopolitan, Working Woman, SELF, and New Woman
1989-90: Yuppies From Hell (Marvel Comics) was excerpted in Cosmopolitan
1993-94: Makin' Ends Meet appeared in First for Women magazine; 1995: Violet appeared in International magazine [15]
2008-2010: You Can Do A Graphic Novel] in Archie Digests, The Independent Newspaper, The Columbia Newspaper
2009: "I Got Married and Other Mistakes" in The Columbia Newspaper [16]
In 1989, Barbara's first graphic novel, Yuppies From Hell, was published by Marvel Comics. The 3 part novel was described as "a mixture of one-off satirical examinations of life among the world of young urban professionals (“yuppies”) and a few characters who we follow throughout the book as they make their way through the world." [17] Comic Book Resources declared the week of May 13th, 2013, to be "Barbara Slate Week]." [18] Brian Cronin writes that Slate "uses a 'soap opera' style to add a nice level of faux drama to the life of yuppies that works really well as a statement of the absurdity of it all." [19] |
In 2012, Other Press published Getting Married and Other Mistakes. [20] Jo is a successful wedding photographer who had followed her mother's advice to snag a husband. After nine years of an unblissful marriage she is dumped for another woman and desperately needs to get on with her life. She realizes that her Mr. Right was actually Mr. Wrong and that she was living her life according to everyone's rules but her own. The graphic novel delves into Jo's struggle with female guilt and her quest for self-awareness. [21]
Getting Married and Other Mistakes was featured May 17, 2013, as the final segment of Barbara Slate Week by Comic Book Resources. [22]
Barbara Slate travels nationwide as a keynote speaker, [23] teacher, moderator and panelist. She teaches kids, teens, and adults how to do graphic novels at schools, libraries, and art centers nationwide, and is an instructor at The Cooper Union in New York City. [24]
In 2010, Pearson (Penuin/Alpha) published Slate's textbook, You Can Do a Graphic Novel. [25] Tom DeFalco, editor-in-chief of Marvel Comics from 1987 to 1995, wrote the foreword for YCDAGN. [26]
YCDAGN was endorsed by Stan Lee, "...if anyone can bring out the writer and artist hidden within society's somnambulant psyche it's the titanically talented Barbara Slate. So please don't read this book. I have a family to support!" [27]
A Teacher's Guide [28] is used with this book at all levels of classroom education.
In the late 1990s, Slate wrote four Barbie Golden books, all published by Western Publishing Company. In 1992 Slate wroteThe Big Splash, in '93 Very Busy Barbie, in '94 Hi, My Name is Barbie, and '95 was Soccer Coach. [29] In 2002, she wrote and drew The Shelby Care and Training Guide, published by Scholastic. [30] She did the layout and illustrated "Truly Mars & Venus" by John Gray in 2003, published by Harper-Collins in many languages. [31] [32]
She is profiled in the seminal work A Century of Women Cartoonists. [33]
A graphic novel is a long-form work of sequential art. The term graphic novel is often applied broadly, including fiction, non-fiction, and anthologized work, though this practice is highly contested by comics scholars and industry professionals. It is, at least in the United States, typically distinct from the term comic book, which is generally used for comics periodicals and trade paperbacks.
Colleen Doran is an American writer-artist and cartoonist. She illustrated hundreds of comics, graphic novels, books and magazines, including the autobiographical graphic novel of Marvel Comics editor and writer Stan Lee entitled Amazing Fantastic Incredible Stan Lee, which became a New York Times bestseller. She adapted and did the art for the short story "Troll Bridge" by Neil Gaiman, which also became a New York Times bestseller. Her books have received Eisner, Harvey, Bram Stoker, Locus, and International Horror Guild Awards.
In comics in the United States, a trade paperback is a collection of stories originally published in comic books, reprinted in book format, usually presenting either a complete miniseries, a story arc from a single title, or a series of stories with an arc or common theme.
Jessica Campbell Jones-Cage, professionally known as Jessica Jones, is a superheroine appearing in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. The character was created by writer Brian Michael Bendis and artist Michael Gaydos and first appeared in Alias #1 as part of Marvel's Max, an imprint for more mature content, and was later retroactively established to have first appeared in The Amazing Spider-Man #4 in the Silver Age of Comic Books as an originally unnamed classmate of Peter Parker, created by writer-editor Stan Lee and artist Steve Ditko. Within the context of Marvel's shared universe, Jones is a former superhero who becomes the owner of Alias Private Investigations. Bendis envisioned the series as centered on Jessica Drew and only decided to create Jones once he realized that the main character he was writing had a distinct-enough voice and background to differentiate her from Drew, though deciding to still name the character after her on the basis of how "two [people] can have the same first name".
Trina Robbins is an American cartoonist. She was an early participant in the underground comix movement, and one of the first female artists in that movement. She is a member of the Will Eisner Hall of Fame.
Raina Telgemeier is an American cartoonist. Her works include the autobiographical webcomic Smile, which was published as a full-color middle grade graphic novel in February 2010, and the follow-up Sisters and the fiction graphic novel Drama, all of which have been on The New York Times Best Seller lists. She has also written and illustrated the graphic novels Ghosts and Guts as well as four graphic novels adapted from The Baby-Sitters Club stories by Ann M. Martin.
Batton Lash was an American comics creator who came to prominence as part of the 1990s self-publishing boom. He is best known for the series Wolff and Byrd, Counselors of the Macabre, a comedic series about law partners specializing in cases dealing with archetypes from the horror genre, which ran as a strip in The National Law Journal, and as a stand-alone series of comic books and graphic novels. He received several awards for his work, including an Inkpot Award, an Independent Book Publishers Association's Benjamin Franklin Award, an Eisner Award, and nominations for two Harvey Awards.
Miss Fury is a fictional superheroine from the Golden Age of Comics. She first appeared as The Black Fury on April 6, 1941, a Sunday comic strip distributed by the Bell Syndicate, and created by artist June Tarpé Mills. The strip was retitled Miss Fury in November 1941.
Gwendolyn Willow Wilson is an American comics writer, prose author, and essayist. Her best-known prose works include the novels Alif the Unseen and The Bird King. She is most well known for relaunching the Ms. Marvel title for Marvel Comics starring a 16-year-old Muslim superhero named Kamala Khan. Her work is most often categorized as magical realism.
Kathryn Moira Beaton is a Canadian comics artist best known as the creator of the comic strip Hark! A Vagrant, which ran from 2007 to 2018. Her other major works include the children's books The Princess and the Pony and King Baby, published in 2015 and 2016 respectively. The former was made into an Apple TV+ series called Pinecone & Pony released in 2022 on which Beaton worked as an executive producer. Also in 2022, Beaton released a memoir in graphic novel form, Ducks: Two Years in the Oil Sands, about her experience working in the Alberta oil sands. Publishers Weekly named Ducks one of their top ten books of the year.
Eleanor McCutcheon Davis is an American cartoonist and illustrator.
David Jason Latour is an American comic-book and comic-strip artist and writer known for his work for Image Comics, Dark Horse Comics, Marvel Comics, and DC Comics on titles such as Wolverine, Winter Soldier, Southern Bastards and Spider-Gwen, co-creating Spider-Woman / Gwen Stacy (Earth-65) in the latter, later adapted to the Spider-Verse film franchise.
Kamala Khan is a superheroine who appears in American comic books published by Marvel Comics. Created by editors Sana Amanat and Stephen Wacker, writer G. Willow Wilson, and artists Adrian Alphona and Jamie McKelvie, Kamala is Marvel's first Muslim protagonist character and South Asian American personality with her own comic book. In the Marvel Universe, Kamala is a teenage Pakistani-American from Jersey City, New Jersey with body-morphing abilities who discovers that she has Inhuman genes in the aftermath of the "Inhumanity" storyline. She assumes the mantle of Ms. Marvel from her idol, Carol Danvers, after Danvers becomes Captain Marvel.
Sana Amanat is an American comic book editor and an executive of production and development at Marvel Studios, having formerly been the Director of Content and Character Development at Marvel Comics. She has worked on comics such as Captain Marvel, Hawkeye, Ultimate Comics: Spider-Man, and Ms. Marvel. Amanat is known for co-creating Kamala Khan / Ms. Marvel, the first Muslim-American superhero with a solo Marvel Comics series.
Gisèle Lagacé is a Canadian comics writer and artist, writer and illustrator of webcomics. She is best known for her series Ménage à 3.
Marieke Nijkamp is a Dutch New York Times bestselling author of novels for young adults.
Ronald Wimberly is an American cartoonist. He has published several graphic novels, as well as shorter works for The New Yorker, DC/Vertigo, Nike, Marvel, Hill and Wang, and Dark Horse Comics. Wimberly was the 2016 Columbus Museum of Art comics resident, and was a two-time resident cartoonist at Angoulême's Maison des Auteurs. He is the recipient of the 2008 Glyph Comics Award, and has been nominated for two Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards.
DC Graphic Novels for Young Adults, formerly known as DC Ink, is an imprint of American comic book publisher DC Comics consisting of original one-shots, graphic novels and reprints of books previously published under other imprints. The imprint intends to present traditional DC Universe characters for young adult readers. The first title of the DC Ink imprint, Mera: Tidebreaker, was published on February 2, 2019 and Batman: Nightwalker was the last title to be published under DC Ink. Wonder Woman: Warbringer, the first title of DC Graphic Novels for Young Adults, was published on January 10, 2020.
Jody Houser is an American professional comics writer known for her work on adaptations and licensed properties. She was nominated for the Eisner Award in 2017 for her writing in the comic series Faith (2016). Additionally, she was the writer on the second volume of Critical Role: Vox Machina Origins, which became a New York Times best-seller in September 2020.