Paul Pope

Summary

Paul Pope (born September 25, 1970) is an American alternative cartoonist. Pope's work combines the precision and romance of European comics artists with the energy and page design of the manga tradition. Pope's two protagonist types are the silent, lanky outsider male of The One Trick Rip-Off, Escapo, and Heavy Liquid; or the resourceful, aggressive, humorous young teenage girls of THB. He has self-published some of his work, most notably THB, through his own Horse Press, with other work for such publishers as DC Comics/Vertigo and First Second Books.

Paul Pope
Born (1970-09-25) September 25, 1970 (age 53)
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
Area(s)Cartoonist, Writer, Artist, Publisher, Letterer
Notable works
THB
Batman: Year 100
Heavy Liquid
100%
Battling Boy
AwardsBest Writer/Artist Eisner Award (2007)
pulphope.blogspot.com

Early life edit

Born in Philadelphia, Pope grew up in Bowling Green, Ohio, with stops in Columbus, Ohio, San Francisco, and Toronto in between. He describes his influences as Daniel Torres, Bruno Premiani, Jack Kirby, Alex Toth, Tony Salmons, Hugo Pratt, Silvio Cadelo, Vittorio Giardino, and Hergé.[1]

Career edit

Pope introduced THB in 1995, the same year he began work for Kodansha, Japan's manga publisher. Pope eventually developed the manga Supertrouble for Kodansha, which mined the "cutie-pie" girl adventure vein that THB exists in. His storytelling narratives continue to mature with well-paced, deftly-shaded combinations of science fiction, hardboiled crime stories and the Romeo and Juliet archetype.

Pope's One-Trick Ripoff was published by Dark Horse Comics, and Heavy Liquid and 100% were published under DC Comics' Vertigo imprint.

In 2006, Pope received an Eisner Award for Best Short Story for his work, "Teenage Sidekick", published in Solo No. 3.

In 2007, Pope won two additional Eisners, Best Writer/Artist and Best Limited Series, for his Batman mini-series, Batman: Year 100. Discussing the story, which is set in 2039, one hundred years after the first appearance of the caped crusader, Pope said: "I wanted to present a new take on Batman, who is without a doubt a mythic figure in our pop-psyche. My Batman is not only totally science fiction, he's also a very physical superhero: he bleeds, he sweats, he eats. He's someone born into an overarching police state; someone with the body of David Beckham, the brain of Tesla, and the wealth of Howard Hughes... pretending to be Nosferatu." The story, colored by José Villarrubia, was originally presented in a four-part prestige format in 2006. DC Comics later published a trade paperback collecting Batman: Year 100 in early 2007. The trade also includes Pope's "Berlin Batman" story from The Batman Chronicles No. 11. "Berlin Batman" involves a version of Batman who lives in the German Weimar Republic on the eve of World War II. The Weimar Batman helps keep the papers of Austrian School economist Ludwig von Mises from falling into Nazi hands. Both Batman stories in the collection reflect implicit libertarian themes that often appear in Pope's work.[2] He also wrote Endgame for Toonami's website and came up with the character Orcelot Rex.[3]

Aside from comics, in the fall of 2006 Pope worked with Italian clothing company Diesel on a big store installation during their fall fashion week campaign, and a screenprint series based on their 'Chelsea Hotel' campaign as a 51st birthday present to Diesel's founder, Renzo Rosso. In the fall of 2008, Pope went a step further by partnering with DKNY to create the DKNY:2089 collection.

Pope's first art book, titled Pulphope: The Art of Paul Pope, came out in June 2007. A collection of his most representative work, the 224-page hardcover was published by AdHouse Books.

In 2009, Pope was featured in The Cartoonist, a documentary film on the life and work of cartoonist Jeff Smith.[4]

Pope spoke at the 2005 New York and 2006 Sydney Semi-Permanent creative conference.[citation needed]

In 2010, Pope served as a Master Artist with the Atlantic Center for the Arts, a Florida-based artists' community providing artists an opportunity to work and collaborate with contemporary artists in the fields of composing, visual, literary, and performing arts.[5]

Pope lives and works in New York City.[6]

Awards edit

Bibliography edit

Horse Press edit

  • Sin Titulo (w/a, graphic novel, 78 pages, 1993, ISBN 1-882402-13-8)[8]
  • The Corruptor] (w/a, 1993)
  • The Ballad of Doctor Richardson (w/a, 1994)[9]
  • THB (w/a):
    • Volume 1 #1–5 (1994–1995)
    • Giant THB Parade (1996)
    • P-City Parade (1997)
    • Giant THB Circus (1998)
    • Mars' Mightiest Mek (one-shot, 2000)
    • Mek-Power #6a-6d (2000–2002)
    • Volume 2 No. 1 (2003)
  • PulpHope 96/7 (w/a, 1996)
  • Buzz Buzz Comics Magazine (w/a, with various writers and artists, 1996)
  • Escapo (w/a, graphic novel, 112 pages, 1999, ISBN 1-882402-16-2)

DC Comics/Vertigo edit

Other US publishers edit

  • Negative Burn (Caliber):
    • "Eulogy to Marx" (w/a, in No. 12, 1994)
    • "The Triumph of Hunger" (w/a, in No. 13, 1994)
    • "Rotten Hubert" (w/a, in No. 18, 1994)
    • "Portrait of a Girl With an Unpronounceable Name" (w/a, in No. 20, 1995)
    • "The Visible Man" (w/a, in No. 21, 1995)
    • "Armadillo/The Island" (a, with Francis Richardson, in No. 23, 1995)
    • "Gangster Strip Dragway" (w/a, in No. 24, 1995)
    • "Strip for 6.30.93" (w/a, in No. 25, 1995)
  • Dark Horse Presents (w/a, Dark Horse):
    • "Pistachio!!" (in v1 #100-0, 1995)
    • "Yes" (in v1 #100-2, 1995)
    • "Pan-Fried Girl" (with Jeff Smith, in v1 #100-5, 1995)
    • "The One Trick Rip-Off" (in v1 #101–112, 1995–1996) collected as The One Trick Rip-Off (tpb, 104 pages, 1997, ISBN 1-569712-44-1)
    • "Four Cats" (in Annual '97, 1998)
    • "1969" (in v2 No. 9, 2012)
  • Roarin' Rick's Rare Bit Fiends #9: "Untitled" (w/a, King Hell, 1995)
  • Dirty Stories #1: "Ukieo-E-Pope" (w/a, Fantagraphics Books, 1997)
  • Oni Double Feature #2–3: "Car Crash" (w/a, Oni Press, 1998)
  • The Spirit: The New Adventures #7: "The Ghost of Tiger Traps" (a, with Jay Stephens, Kitchen Sink, 1998) collected in Will Eisner's The Spirit Archives Volume 27 (hc, 200 pages, Dark Horse, 2009, ISBN 1-56971-732-X)
  • Bone #36: "Woah! Just 36 Seconds to Diffuse This TNT!!" (w/a, Cartoon Books, 1999)
  • Non #5: "Airplanes" (w/a, Red Ink, 2001)
  • Michael Neno's Reactionary Tales No. 1 :"The Ballad of Michael Neno" (w/a, Neno Productions, 2001)
  • Marvel:
  • Rosetta: A Comics Anthology Volume 2 (w/a, anthology graphic novel, 268 pages, Alternative Comics, 2004, ISBN 1-89186-762-8)
  • AdHouse Books:
    • Project: Superior: "The Rest of Xondex-Xomax" (w/a, anthology graphic novel, 288 pages, 2005, ISBN 0-972179-48-8)
    • PulpHope: The Art of Paul Pope (w/a, graphic novel, 224 pages, 2007, ISBN 0-977030-43-1)
    • THB: Comics from Mars #1–2 (w/a, 2007–2010)
  • The Lone Ranger #11: "Downbeat" (a, with Brett Matthews and Sergio Cariello, Dynamite, 2008)
  • CBLDF Presents: Liberty Comics #2: "Place 4 Loverman!!" (w/a, Image, 2009)
  • Strange Science Fantasy #1–6 (w/a, co-feature, IDW Publishing, 2010) collected in Strange Science Fantasy (tpb, 196 pages 2011, ISBN 1-600108-88-1)
  • Adventure Time #5: "Emit Erutnevda!!" (w/a, co-feature, Boom! Studios, 2012)
  • Battling Boy (First Second Books)
    • The Death of Haggard West (2013) — 32-page pamphlet-format preview of Battling Boy vol. 1
    • vol. 1: Battling Boy (2013)
    • vol. 2: The Rise of Aurora West (2014) — prequel to Battling Boy written with J. T. Petty; art by David Rubín
    • vol. 3: The Fall of the House of West (2015) — written with J. T. Petty; art by David Rubín

Cover work edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pope, Paul. P-City Parade (Horse Press, 1997).
  2. ^ Cantor, Paul A. (March 1998). "Holy Praxeology, Batman." The Free Market, Vol. 16, No. 3.
  3. ^ "Toonami Fan – Jason DeMarco Interview". Archived from the original on October 2, 2017. Retrieved July 10, 2008.
  4. ^ The Cartoonist Movie Archived 2012-08-15 at the Wayback Machine. Retrieved November 23, 2012.
  5. ^ Johnston, Rich. "Comic Artist Residency On Offer In Florida With Paul Pope, Craig Thompson and Svetlana Chmakova," Bleeding Cool (April 28, 2010).
  6. ^ Paul Pope – About Paul Pope – About
  7. ^ 2010 REUBEN AWARDS WINNERS," National Cartoonists Society website (May 29, 2010).
  8. ^ "New Publisher, New Artist, New Graphic Novel: Horse Press Launches New Line with Paul Pope's Sin Titulo," The Comics Journal #152 (Aug. 1992), p. 12.
  9. ^ "Paul Pope to Release Dr. Richardson," The Comics Journal No. 163 (Nov. 1993), p. 25.

Sources edit

  • Mescallado, Ray. Two-part interview with Pope in The Comics Journal No. 191 (Nov. 1996) and 192 (Dec. 1996)
  • Young, Robert. Paul Pope interview, The Comics Interpreter No. 1 Vol. 2 (2008)
  • Mautner, Chris. "'I'm Shocked to Be Meeting Young People Who Are Reading This': An Interview with Paul Pope," The Comics Journal (JAN 15, 2014)

External links edit

  • Paul Pope's Blog
  • Heavy Liquid review and artwork
  • Batman-On-Film.com – BOF's review of "BATMAN: YEAR 100"

Interviews edit

  • The Podium (1999)
  • Pulp: The Manga Magazine's Carl Gustav Horn (August 2001)
  • Keith Giles (2002)
  • Comic Geek Speak podcast (December 2005)
  • Lost At E Minor (2006)
  • Wired (February 2006)
  • Ain't It Cool News (2010)