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Post by MDG on Oct 21, 2014 11:22:06 GMT -5
Also Dan Spiegle and Jack Sparling.
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Post by Ish Kabbible on Oct 21, 2014 16:44:53 GMT -5
I'm sure Carl Bark's fans know approximately how many pages he produced. John Stanley did tons of work including all those Little Lulus
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Post by Deleted on Oct 21, 2014 16:51:40 GMT -5
Sparling occurred to me as well. I know he did copious amounts of work for Dell back in the '60s.
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Post by Cei-U! on Oct 21, 2014 17:01:06 GMT -5
Sam Glanzman might well deserve a spot on the list. He turned out tons of material for Dell, Charlton, DC, and quite a few minor Golden and Atomic Age publishers.
Cei-U! I summon the industry's top workhorses!
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Post by earl on Oct 21, 2014 19:19:18 GMT -5
Guys like Kirby, the Buscemas and others are like Cy Young in baseball, there are never going to be guys doing 2-4 issues a month again.
Dan Jurgens has been pretty prolific and has remained popular really since the late 80s. I'd bet Mark Bagley is another from his generation of pencilers whose total issue count is starting to get up there too. JR Jr. has slowed down a bit in the past few years, but he's done a ton of issues over the years. These three have managed to stay popular where other artists from their generation seem to be on the outside with the big two.
I'd figure someone like Carlos Ezquerra has done a ton of work over his career, just with his 2000 Ad work and I am sure he has done other stuff in Europe too.
It would be hard to figure how much work guys like Ernie Chan or Alfredo Alcala, who were very prolific in their US work but I would imagine did lots of artwork in the Philippines.
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Post by MDG on Oct 22, 2014 13:37:28 GMT -5
I'm sure Carl Bark's fans know approximately how many pages he produced. John Stanley did tons of work including all those Little Lulus Stanley often worked just as a writer, even on Lulu, though I think he storyboarded everything.
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Post by Paste Pot Paul on Nov 13, 2014 16:46:21 GMT -5
Did Dick Ayers rank at all, it seems to my VERY unstudied eye that he drew everything in the 60s that Jack didnt, and finished half of those.
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Post by Deleted on Nov 14, 2014 20:18:06 GMT -5
My top Five Comic Book Artists in terms of volume, pages, and everything in between.
1. Jack Kirby 2. Osamu Tezuka (Manga) 3. Carl Barks (Donald Duck, Daisy Duck, and Huey, Dewey, and Louie!) 4. Steve Ditko 5. Carmine Infantino
Honorable Mentions: Bill Finger, C.C. Beck, Frank Miller, Dan Jurgens, Jim Lee, Marc Silvestri, and John Byrne
And, not to mention John Romita, John Romita Jr, Brian Bollard, Will Eisner, Dave Gibbons, and Steve Dillon too.
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